

Around here, people usually have to replace the wiring in such old houses, since they tend to only have two wires (i.e. no PE). But the Schuko sockets themselves are most likely fine.
Around here, people usually have to replace the wiring in such old houses, since they tend to only have two wires (i.e. no PE). But the Schuko sockets themselves are most likely fine.
I think the typical limit is around 3600W, with 16A at 230V
I have never heard of someone having to replace their wall outlets due to wear and tear
100MB/s are frustrating for a NAS. SSDs have been common for a decade, and the old spinning rust storage in my NAS is still faster than the network can handle?
That’s true, but nothing does. Once someone receives a message, you have no control over what they do with it (regardless of communication channel, encryption, etc.). I read the comment above more like “instead of jumping through hoops to get around the spyware in your operating system, use an operating system that does not come with built-in spyware instead”.
There are special 3-phase connectors, but usually only in the kitchen (for an electric range)
People only see what their outlet provides. If you ask someone about the european voltage, they’ll probably say “220-230V”, not " 3-phase 400V".
I always get ‘Blocked by Network security’ for trying to access Reddit from a VPN
Why bother? Use a VPN.
Do the cars not have to be certified? It seems to me that fewer employees just means longer delays for certifications, not easier certifications
Which country is that? I just recently got fiber, but 1G down 0.5G up would cost me 90€/month, and that’s the fastest they’re offering.
I also wouldn’t use the built-in Wifi on this, but I can understand why they’d want to offer an all-in-one solution
From the image, it doesn’t seem like it has rack mounts, which is kind of an odd choice. There are lots of switches that have a similar form factor, but can be put in 10" or 19" racks depending on which rack ears you put on it
Follow-up video idea: speed ≠ distance
Git is already decentralized, nothing is stopping you from adding multiple remotes to your repo.
I always thought the second amendment was supposed to prevent this
What’s stopping you from connecting it to the local network but denying internet access? E.g. via a firewall rule or separate VLAN?
Gemini auf die Eier
Uhm this is exactly why you only store already-encrypted data on remote servers
You mean A Guy Instead?