• CIPWTTKT&GC V43 - WHERE IS MY THINKPAD?
    5,002 replies, posted
[QUOTE=S31-Syntax;52303918]So I got a tmobile mini-cell for my office... of course it needs 3 ports forwarded in order for it to work. I have no choice but to contact the... [I]helpdesk...[/I] for assistance, but I have no idea what the thing's IP is. I have its mac address, but i'd prefer to have everything I need so I sound more knowledgeable to the HD and thus have a higher chance of them helping me with this. The thing will benefit literally anybody here that uses Tmobile. Can't help sprint or ATT customers and this used to be a Verizon building so they don't even need help. Advice?[/QUOTE] If this is some kind of corporate environment (and depending on how lax IT is), the answer is more than likely just going to be "no, we don't want a strange device on our network"
This is why Google Drive costs more than ACD: [code]Transferred: 5037.509 GBytes (108.687 MBytes/s) Errors: 19 Checks: 86 Transferred: 34965 Elapsed time: 13h11m1.2s[/code]
From reddit, don't get random Chinese eBay power supplies. [t]http://i.imgur.com/LNQdzGh.jpg[/t] Twice the power of what I've got, half the cost, and an order of magnitude more property damage.
[QUOTE=nikomo;52307852]From reddit, don't get random Chinese eBay power supplies. [t]http://i.imgur.com/LNQdzGh.jpg[/t] Twice the power of what I've got, half the cost, and an order of magnitude more property damage.[/QUOTE] Those Chinese supplies can have pretty bad mains input wiring, as long as you actually inspect them they are fine, wouldn't leave them unattended for long periods though.
[QUOTE=S31-Syntax;52303918]So I got a tmobile mini-cell for my office... of course it needs 3 ports forwarded in order for it to work. I have no choice but to contact the... [I]helpdesk...[/I] for assistance, but I have no idea what the thing's IP is. I have its mac address, but i'd prefer to have everything I need so I sound more knowledgeable to the HD and thus have a higher chance of them helping me with this. The thing will benefit literally anybody here that uses Tmobile. Can't help sprint or ATT customers and this used to be a Verizon building so they don't even need help. Advice?[/QUOTE] We have physically seperate network for unknown/strange devices that need internet access (its treated like our break room wifi for employee phones), so maybe they might have something like that. But I wouldn't count on it. Especially if it requires modifying the firewall.
I feel so fucking filthy having to buy and install 1tb hard drives to boot 700mb system images because you can't buy smaller drives now in quantity and I am not yet approved in this application to go ahead and purchase DOMs or SSD's.
Anyone had any experience with Ubiquiti UniFi gear? I'm thinking of kitting out my parents house with an outdoor access point and one or two indoor ones. The house struggles with WiFi due to brick walls so I think it'd be quite beneficial for them. Would any 802.3af-compliant switch work with regards to powering them correctly?
[QUOTE=colincooke;52308564]Anyone had any experience with Ubiquiti UniFi gear? I'm thinking of kitting out my parents house with an outdoor access point and one or two indoor ones. The house struggles with WiFi due to brick walls so I think it'd be quite beneficial for them. Would any 802.3af-compliant switch work with regards to powering them correctly?[/QUOTE] Depends on the model [url]https://help.ubnt.com/hc/en-us/articles/115000263008--UniFi-Understanding-PoE-and-How-UniFi-Devices-are-Powered#active%20vs%20passive[/url] [t]https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-oLKFzd6_Z7s/WTL4uygArYI/AAAAAAAAQhg/iAA-_9TC924Gqd0dlQ1nS7_-el7elA-HACHM/s0/2017-06-04_03-58-21.png[/t][t]https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-wOuNamYT4Es/WTL483pqUQI/AAAAAAAAQhk/GOUFjVl-2TggDYDeJ4WSL2yh-1vte4VwACHM/s0/2017-06-04_03-59-18.png[/t] Cheaper models tend to be 24v passive POE, so you'll need an injector for them Otherwise I love the stuff I have, ER-X and AP-LR, really stable and powerful compared to my old stuff, been completely set and forget
[del]Power supplies are so cheap now for really high quality ones, why would anyone buy a Chinese one to save a few bucks on their expensive rig?[/del] I'm retarded, that's an adjustable power supply :v:
[QUOTE=Saxon;52308853][del]Power supplies are so cheap now for really high quality ones, why would anyone buy a Chinese one to save a few bucks on their expensive rig?[/del] I'm retarded, that's an adjustable power supply :v:[/QUOTE] Eh, honestly still a legit point. Sometimes cheaping out isn't worth it in the long run.
Wait, so AMD is going to have 4 dies on an interposer for the Epyc CPUs? And you can have a two socket system, for 8 dies total. I wonder how much of their R&D time was spent on the InfinityFabric tech. I know they were already working on it when they were working on ARM CPU designs, but man. That's just crazy.
Power supplies are never the component ya wanna cheap out on.
[QUOTE=helifreak;52306052]This is why Google Drive costs more than ACD: [code]Transferred: 5037.509 GBytes (108.687 MBytes/s) Errors: 19 Checks: 86 Transferred: 34965 Elapsed time: 13h11m1.2s[/code][/QUOTE] Meanwhile I'm sitting here with 16transfers and a 1gigabit pipe on a remote server pushing 3MB/s. RIP
[QUOTE=nikomo;52307852]From reddit, don't get random Chinese eBay power supplies. [t]http://i.imgur.com/LNQdzGh.jpg[/t] Twice the power of what I've got, half the cost, and an order of magnitude more property damage.[/QUOTE] Well shit, that's the exact model I've literally been using all day Oh well, there's a fire extinguisher right next to it anyway
[QUOTE=Dr. Evilcop;52308990]Power supplies are never the component ya wanna cheap out on.[/QUOTE] When I got a new PSU, I spent like $20 more just so I could get one with a 10 year warranty rather than 7. :v:
[QUOTE=nikomo;52307852]From reddit, don't get random Chinese eBay power supplies. [t]http://i.imgur.com/LNQdzGh.jpg[/t] Twice the power of what I've got, half the cost, and an order of magnitude more property damage.[/QUOTE] god, this is one of my fears at my job :v: I've had server power supplies create small fires and the like before but it always kinda terrifies me.
[QUOTE=colincooke;52308564]Anyone had any experience with Ubiquiti UniFi gear? I'm thinking of kitting out my parents house with an outdoor access point and one or two indoor ones. The house struggles with WiFi due to brick walls so I think it'd be quite beneficial for them. Would any 802.3af-compliant switch work with regards to powering them correctly?[/QUOTE] If you want to or plan to use different brands that have PoE capabilities, get something that is 802.3af/t compliant since those are proper standards. If you prefer to go a bit cheaper, you can get the 24v passive, but make sure all devices that will utilise it are from Ubiquiti since it isn't an open standard (each AP also comes with a PoE injector, so you can still get away with different brands if need be). Also save enough money to get a [url=https://www.amazon.com/Ubiquiti-Unifi-Cloud-Key-Control/dp/B017T2QB22]Unifi Cloud Key[/url] or have a server ready because the APs are configured externally. A final thing (and also some content) is if you configure the outdoor AP, make sure rain isn't going to mess with it. This may seem obvious, but my brother-in-law had to deal with an AP that blew recently because the company decided it was a good idea to mount it outside with the PoE enabled jack facing up :v:
[QUOTE=Niteshifter;52310632]Also save enough money to get a [url=https://www.amazon.com/Ubiquiti-Unifi-Cloud-Key-Control/dp/B017T2QB22]Unifi Cloud Key[/url] or have a server ready because the APs are configured externally.[/QUOTE] The server doesn't need to be running 24/7, only when you want to configure stuff (or want to use the captive guest portal). I just have it installed on my desktop and start it when I need it
You can also configure single AP's with the phone app
Relevant, I actually got an idea for a program and went through with it, first thing I've written in a good while and I'm proud of how neat it is :v: [img]https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-4p_c7KnCUT4/WTPJATUmYAI/AAAAAAAAQhw/LJqAI7g5WmsBOE0pcZdK0tAqHdjWFfs9ACHM/s0/2017-06-04_18-46-59.png[/img] A friend got hold of a free Aerohive AP, but didn't want to spend a shitload of money on the controller software. You can configure them all through the CLI but he had no idea how to do that Made him a little interface that SSHs in and does all the important things he needs. Spent forever making all the textboxes have pretty placeholder text and making it somewhat error tolerant
It's always a delight seeing a small, practical, native interface instead of a yet another web app. Kudos for you.
You age faster when you write regex [t]https://tenryuu.blob.core.windows.net/astrid/17-06-04_21-56-42-Online_regex_tester_and_debugger_PHP,_PCRE,_Pytho.png[/t]
Linux still doesn't make sense as a desktop OS. Obviously the solution to colour banding is to change the monitor bit depth from 8 to 6 and enable dithering. Everybody knows that less is more. Samba still defaults to SMB1 which basically only works with samba servers now and the default settings for nVidia cards results in screen tearing [I]fucking everywhere[/I].
Writing regex is easy Reading it is a whole other clusterfuck
[QUOTE=Oicani Gonzales;52311376]regex is seriously one of the most absurd things you can possibly have to do[/QUOTE] I have to do some for work and trying to figure it out (just gotta parse one single API response) has taking two weeks and counting.
Jesus MS, just let it be handled by the software developer for the game instead.
Depending on how Microsoft handles this it could be really handy for large multiplayer games, Like protecting the games memory from being read/written and help make bans more permanent by sharing the HardwareID in a less by-passable way.
Holy fuck, imagine how the Valve game hacking community will react to this thing :v:
This could potentially be great for hackers, no longer do we have to fight around with custom acs in each game, we can just bypass this one from msft which is bound to be absolute crap and do whatever we want
They'll probably just give the process the same kind of protection as high risk usermode applications/services do.
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