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There were many portable CD players with enough buffering that they'd never skip. Panasonic Shockwave (IIRC) for example. And car heatunits.

You had to get a very old or seriously cheap portable player to get skipping.


Probably helps that the stance is likely "Hack this target or your family dies". That's always pretty uhhhh motivational.

Why would they need such incentives? All they gotta do is give them a decent wage and they will be happy, which in North Korea is a paltry sum. Its not like regular North Koreans are traveling around the world, they couldn't afford it even without any other restrictions, so they have zero risk of arrest or punishment from other nations.

If I told you today that I will pay you a million dollars to go fuck around with some North Korean servers, and doing it completely anonymously with the full protection and sanction of your government, would you say no?

I think you may have some unrealistic views on how North Korea operates internally. 99% of their population lives completely normal lives and has zero extra interactions with the government beyond basic grunt military service which is common across much of the world, and paperwork for licensing, permits, and taxes. We only see the worst possible views of North Korea from the outside, slathered with thick layers of additional propaganda on top of it.


> That's always pretty uhhhh motivational

If you only met the world on American TV, yes.


Maybe they hire international talent.

Hire is not always the correct word. There is evidence they acquire international talent without consent.

Not quite so clean.

VE can be a cluster of nodes that you can still manage via the same UI. ESXi cant do that, ESXi UI is a single node, and not even everything that a single node can do with vCenter added.

Proxmox VE is both ESXi and some/most of vCenter.


It's in beta, but HAProxy has a gateway product:

https://www.haproxy.com/blog/announcing-haproxy-unified-gate...


Love haproxy but if we’re shilling projects istio is superior. Multi cluster, hbone, ambient.


What is hbone? What is ambient?


> istio is superior

It's also eating a significant amount of your compute and memory


Lots more moving pieces though


There are many Gateway implementations: https://gateway-api.sigs.k8s.io/implementations/


Not really, those people go to a hospital where there is a duty of care. Hospitals don't get to just say "Nah, not gonna help you" and close the door for people showing up in the ED.

So those vaccine deniers get sick, lose their commitment, go to the ED, get some level of treatment/help/etc, and suck up resources and impact help for the guy who got vaccinated then got hit by someone running a red light....


Also, they will help spread the disease around, chances to hit some less fortunate chaps increasing with every new carrier.


There is a new Unified one that can use SQLite and other options. I have been using that one for a year or more


Framework, the AMD versions.

Can take the 48GB SODIMMs that are on the market now. That'll handle a spreadsheet or two.


Great - thx!


You can also use Codeberg.


Glacier Deep Archive is the cheapest cloud backup option at $1USD/month/TB.

Google Cloud Store Archive Tier is a tiny bit more.


To quote the old mongodb video: If you don't care about restores, /dev/null is even cheaper, and its webscale.


Both would be pretty expensive to actually restore from, though, IIRC.


Quite expensive, but it should only ever be a last resort after your local backups have all failed in some way or another. For $1/mo/TB you purchase the opportunity to pay an exorbitant amount to recover from an otherwise catastrophic situation.


If you don't test your backups, they don't exist.


There is a free tier that accounts for testing, first 100GB of transfer out of AWS per month is free.


Yes, about $90USD per TB.

But I weigh that against data recovery from failed disks and the loss of the data I put in Glacier (family photos/etc). Then its dirt cheap.


VerneMQ also has built in clustering and message replication which would make this easy.


Have you tried both EMQx and VerneMQ and would you specifically recommend one over the other? I don't have experience with VerneMQ


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