

It’s literally called “IPv6 privacy extension”. It’s what it does.
Unless you’re in the middle and fowarding the packets, you won’t stumble across a connectable IPv6 endpoint.


It’s literally called “IPv6 privacy extension”. It’s what it does.
Unless you’re in the middle and fowarding the packets, you won’t stumble across a connectable IPv6 endpoint.


The smallest possible subnet has 18.4 quintillion addresses.
You can’t scan it before encountering the heat death of the universe.
Outgoing connections are made on a different address that does not accept incoming connections. You never disclose your real IP when browsing.
So, no. It can’t be done.


They’re portscanning bots.
I made SSH IPv6-only and it stopped. You can’t scan IPv6 space for open ports.
I believe the whole movement started when RMS got a new printer and the firmware was locked down. A feature he liked was taken away, and the manufacturer took control.
Fast forward a few decades and you’ll realise this laid the foundation for the deluge of printer enshittificarion that followed.
Not the strongest name. Sounds kinda weak.
Maybe “Photographic Image Manipulation Program”?
It’s a GNU program, not a Linux program. It runs on multiple platforms.


Interesting. I’m getting full marks on mxtoolbox but failing the same tests on this one.
I wanted to get involved in a community project around Manhattan. Is there anything good going on?


I searched for “Messages” on the play store, and the top link was malware. WTAF?


I removed the network permission from the play store. Apps will still work if they arbitrarily require Google Play to be installed. The store itself can’t do shit.
GrapheneOS can remove Play Store network permissions. I’m not sure about others.


I wonder if anyone ever wrote an update aggregator that would find all package managers, containers and git repos and whatnot and just do all of them.
Some are a right pain to update, such as Nextcloud. Installing a monthly update should not feel like an enterprise prod deployment.
It’s kinda ironic that package managers have caused the exact problem that they are supposed to solve.


I just peel it under running cold water. Fast and easy.


Ahh. That’s usually among the red stuff in dmesg. I glad to hear you solved it, but a failing hard drive is a pricey thing to endure these days.


Just start listening to dubstep and you’ll stop noticing 😆.
Maybe run lm-sensors and make sure the CPU/GPU isn’t being thermothrottled? I’d usually look at dmesg and look for red stuff. Any hardware issues are usually pretty obvious.
Try other apps. If you youtube or VLC behaves the same, the problem may be outside of jellyfin. If not, it narrows it down.
If could even be the server not being able to transcode in realtime. Try watching a file known to already be in a suitable format. It should direct stream and be much less load on the server. I’ve seen server encode CPU saturation and it does kinda look the same as client decode stutter. If it’s the server, you’ll probably see the same stutter from another device such as a phone.


Exactly the same as the Pixel now.


Mine would go years without changing. The last few changes were caused by things like the upstream DHCP server failing and being replaced.


Make it a subdomain on a wildcard cert if you’re concerned about that.


Just expose it on single-stack IPv6. Nobody ever knocks. The address space is not scannable.


Well, the app doesn’t use network permissions. That’s a good sign.
The link to his youtube still works, and he’s been posting fortnite videos recently.
There’s a video from 10 months back, and his health doesn’t look great.