That’s unfortunate that they won’t be able to put that money to better use, but I hope they use this opportunity to improve the system security and reliability.
I didn’t see any references to the homeless in this post and it contained a lot of good insights and discussion about preparedness. Sadly the WA state doesn’t open up a thread on Lemmy yet. One day
If you are port forwarding. I recommend not exposing it on the default port of 25565 and instead expose it as a random port. Then, assuming you have a domain name, create an SRV record that points to your IP and port. This will cut down on the drive by scanners who scan by ports, but won’t totally eliminate it. If you do use the SRV record, your friends won’t even notice there’s a different port.
Looks like Lynnwood and others are capitalizing on this to increase housing around the light rail station:
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There’s a set of special topics under homeassistant/
that devices also publish to that describe what each topic does and how HA should present it. HA will subscribe to everything under that root topic to discover all your MQTT devices.
Just updated and it looks like this one fixed the log spam:
json_loads was called from hacs, this is a deprecated function which will be removed in HA Core 2025.8.
Use homeassistant.util.json.json_loads instead, please create a bug report at https://github.com/hacs/integration/issues
It’s a little weird they don’t have a download update button on the new HACS dashboard for an individual repository, now you have to go to Settings > Updates. I also wish I could hide new and available repositories and only show the ones I have installed (you can’t seem to select Pending Restart, Pending Update, and Downloaded at the same time.)
As if Sound Transit needs any more reasons to delay and rethink and collect community input on the West Seattle link.
There’s two main ways of doing geo-based load balancing:
Of course, this doesn’t matter for companies that only have one data center.
Sorry, what do you mean route it directly? Maybe I didn’t clarify well enough.
My DNS is routed over the VPN but Internet traffic is routed directly. The problem is the load balancing is done based on where the DNS server is so say Google even though the traffic egresses directly to the internet bypassing the VPN it still goes to a Google DC near my home. Not all websites do this so its not always an issue.
Yes, but if you hit a company doing DNS based load balancing, DNS is going to return an IP that’s near to your DNS server which may not be near your device. That’s going to add to the latency.
I have Wireguard and I forward DNS and my internal traffic from my phone over the VPN to my pi-hole at home. All other traffic goes directly over the Internet, not the VPN. So that means only DNS encounters higher latency.
However, because a lot of companies do DNS based geo load balancing that means even if I’m on the east coast all my traffic gets sent to the West Coast because my DNS server is located there. That right there has the biggest impact on latency.
It’s tolerable on the same continent, but once I start getting into other continents then it gets a bit slow.
If you’re using it, Home Assistant natively supports Wake On Lan. This would only be able to handle the shutdown/sleep side of things.
I think there’s a number of things in play. The fact that there’s a large number of addicts hanging out between Westlake and Pike Place makes it not a super fun place to go. This mall also tried to go for the high end stores and there wasn’t as much mid tier stores and businesses (IMO) which attracts a larger base of people.
Things that can be composted are usually food waste or food spoiled papers not treated with chemicals. Paper is hard to recycle because it can only recycled into lower quality paper, frequently gets contaminated, and it’s hard to seperate out from everything else.
Thus if something is compostable I believe it’s better to compost than to recycle that same material.
I’ve been eagerly looking forward to the time when I can replay my Echo Dots with a self-hosted solution, but so far I haven’t found hardware that I really liked the look and style of.
Accidentally typo your password and get blocked. And if you’re tunneling over tor, you’ve blocked 127.0.0.1 which means now nobody can login.
Paperless does support defining a folder structure that you can use to organize documents within that paperless media volume however you should treat it as read only.
OP could use this as a way to keep their desired folder structure as much as possible, but it would have to be separate from the consumption folder.
On Android, you can specify which applications you want included or excluded. Or you can specify that you only route your home LAN IP ranges through wireguard. Both of those would accomplish your goal.