So your threat model assumes an actor with a quantum computer capable of breaking RSA, but not a regular computer capable of filtering by IP address?
See also https://lemmy.world/u/p1mrx
So your threat model assumes an actor with a quantum computer capable of breaking RSA, but not a regular computer capable of filtering by IP address?
That DI-30 tape drive was a couple years older than the rest of the system. That’s why it’s half the size of the hard drive. It was a consumer-grade format with somewhat janky proprietary software.
Those songs were scavenged from the internet, as I never had the musical skill to make them.
I used https://cifkao.github.io/html-midi-player/ to get MIDI working in modern browsers, though it seems less reliable than an adlib synth.
Here is the building on Street View:
It’s been knocked down and replaced since 2015.
If your printer has a touch sensor, then raising/lowering the entire bed has no effect on the first layer. The Z offset defines the difference between the touch point and the first layer.
I think most people calibrate the Z offset for 0.2 mm, and then never change the first layer height.
Edit: oops, this thread is a month old.
Ye gods! What about the children?
I found them via IP address, so I don’t know anything about the company beyond that.
2a09:: 2a11:: and 2409:: are the shortest.
I listed the 5 possible digits. What’s missing?
IPv6 subnet masks are long, but super easy because of hexadecimal. A bunch of F
s, then [
then a bunch of ]?0
s.
Kyjov is 1000 km from Kyiv.
They have used “BNL” officially. I recall they had an Enhanced CD (maybe Rock Spectacle) with a video that began “This is BNL TV”, but I can’t find a copy on the internet.
They mostly shit CO₂, which thankfully doesn’t cause any problems.
Which tablet? I checked every device on https://www.gsmarena.com/results.php3?sQuickSearch=yes&sName=nexus, and none have Mini USB. There were two Nexus 7 tablets with Micro USB.
Google’s own Nexus devices had mini-USB connectors.
I was addressing this point in particular. There were no “Nexus” devices with MiniUSB, so it was clear quite early that Google considered MicroUSB to “the right port” for Android.
A VPN encrypts traffic between your device and the VPN server, and any packet on that path includes your IP address. So anyone attempting to decrypt your VPN traffic can trivially distinguish your packets from other users of the VPN server.