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Can’t believe no one has mentioned Inovelli yet. Developed with the community, with OTA support in Z2M, they are absolutely fantastic and incredibly flexible!
https://inovelli.com/ blue series
Can’t believe no one has mentioned Inovelli yet. Developed with the community, with OTA support in Z2M, they are absolutely fantastic and incredibly flexible!
https://inovelli.com/ blue series
If you want your answer, have a look at Desjardins in Quebec. They have something like half of the total marketshare.
Desjardins Group ranks 4th among the Safest Banks in North America according to Global Finance, and its capital ratios and credit ratings are among the best in the industry.
PCIe absolutely does support disconnecting devices. It is a hot swap bus, that’s how ExpressCard works. But it doesn’t mean that the board/uefi implements it correctly.
100%, the death of Kijiji has been tragic for me.
Before it was a BDSM thing, it was just a form of corporal punishment called figging. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figging
I’m weird. No sacaram intended.
👉crou🤘crou👈 beaucoup de travail comme pour un album d’Astérix!
Sans aucun doute, toi tu saurais me faire l’umour fou!
Signal has stories now too!
You should be good to go. Make sure vfio is loaded in the modules-load.d
vfio
vfio_iommu_type1
vfio_pci
vfio_virqfd
Make sure the module options are set correctly and the kernel module is blacklisted in /etc/modprobe.d/vfio.conf
options vfio-pci ids=1000:0097
blacklist MODULE_NAME
Make sure.IOMMU is enabled in your kernel command line (ex via grub): intel_iommu=on iommu=pt
This is probably not complete, but it should get you pretty far into allowing you to add the pci device in the hardware config of your vm
People have big egos. I’ve been in similiar situations as OP where the owner/CTO wrote a lot of the legacy code and weren’t particularly receptive to criticism. No acknowledgement either when said criticism turned out to be a client facing vulnerability later on.
I’ve been coding since I was around 12. I’ve been doing it for around three decades now…
On the opposite side of the spectrum, I work for a company that has a pretty strick no assholes policy. We’ve passed on a number of “rock stars” because we knew how personally toxic they were to a team. I do some of the culture fit (which we do first) and tech interviews.
We don’t care all that much if you get it right or wrong. I mean if it’s all wrong and the candidate has no clue why sure. But sometimes candidates get stressed out being on display, being pressed for time, trying to come up with the most optimized answer instead of just completing. If it’s all wrong and the candidate can tell me exactly why and what they’d need to do to get it right, that’s mostly a pass for us.
Ultimately wanna see a) how you think, what is your thought process and b) that you can grow.
Obviously I updated my 5110 to a 3310 only a few years later!
But to be honest I think my all time favorite will always stay my Ericsson T610/630… I kept that thing for over seven years. It rocked. Even had Bluetooth which I used to connect with my X10 home automation.
If you think you’re old, I started with a Nokia 5110…
Probably me on my Nokia 5110 with the slick custom faceplate, extra thiccccc battery, and analog external module.
Pretty much, it was still expensive af though. I got my first cellphone in 1999 with Fido. Probably paid something like 50$ month and that came with like 100 texts messages and not very many minutes of local only calling.
Beyond corporate greed, there is none. SMS’ are even sent as part of routine packets on the cellular network so they don’t even take extra data. Carriers might pay extra for inter carrier routing, but again the cost associated with that is mostly corporate greed.
You compare to the internet but you have to remember, back when SMS’ were the only player in terms of cellular messaging, cellular data cost an arm and a leg.
First off you should realize that the registrar’s and domain name servers don’t have to be the same. Feel free to use any registrar (ex: namecheap, gandi, etc) and host the domain name server anywhere else.
Secondly, if you want a good API for dynamic updates, I’d recommend looking for something that supports
nsupdate
, which is bind’s built-in update mechanism. It’s supported almost everywhere, including by let’s encrypt clients like Lego.