Founding member of company that stands to make fortunes through a product endorses said product.
Founding member of company that stands to make fortunes through a product endorses said product.
Instead of being a dick about it, why don’t you show what they’re doing and why you don’t like it, so we can all be educated and/or have a conversation about it, so everyone can decide for themselves if it’s a problem for them?
They’re also prioritising a few great and much needed QoL improvements like vertical tabs, tab grouping and a new Profile Management system!
https://blog.mozilla.org/en/mozilla/heres-what-were-working-on-in-firefox/
They’re Meross, this one specifically.
https://shop.meross.com/products/meross-matter-plug-with-energy-monitor-mss315-uk
I got a couple of PM plugs with Matter support. I can’t pair them with HomeKit or Home Assistant. I spent about 5h troubleshooting this, inspecting network packets and whatnot and didn’t get any closer to having them working.
I’d rather things just had MQTT support. Happy with Zigbee though, as I can route those to MQTT as well.
“Quantum security” is a fairly widely accepted term in the industry and it has meaning.
Other terms with the same or similar meaning are quantum cryptography or post-quantum security.
https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/whitepaper/quantum-security-technologies
https://thequantuminsider.com/2023/07/17/quantum-security/
https://www.nomios.com/resources/what-is-quantum-security/
https://www.weforum.org/global_future_councils/gfc-on-cybersecurity/projects/quantum-security/
https://www.hashicorp.com/blog/quantum-security-and-cryptography-in-hashicorp-vault
https://blog.1password.com/passkeys-quantum-computers-encryption/
This is about them adding post-quantum encryption, which means encryption that could survive an attack using quantum computers.
This is computer science and mathematics, not pseudoscientific crap.
3rd party cookies make tracking users easier when the same cookie can be used on many websites.
Firefox does 2 things to protect you from that: it blocks known trackers cookies by default; and for the others it isolates them per domain so that kind of tracking doesn’t happen. That ensures you’re not tracked and at the same time it doesn’t break any functionality.
If you want to completely block them you can. There’s more info here: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/third-party-cookies-firefox-tracking-protection
Actually pretty much all browsers support tables, it’s been part of the HTML spec forever.
K8s and Proxmox operate at different levels. You can run k8s on Proxmox, and that’s what I’ve been (very slowly) building up to at home.
With Proxmox you can failover VMs between nodes as long as storage (including VM boot disk) is external to the nodes. This can be NFS on a NAS, iSCSI, Ceph or many other options.
It’s even possible to failover a USB device (e.g. a Zigbee controller or similar) by attaching one on each node and mapping them using Resource Mappings (search on the announcement post: https://www.proxmox.com/en/about/press-releases/proxmox-virtual-environment-8-0).
This can also be used if you’re deploying k8s on top of Proxmox just as well.
Love Shelly and would second the recommendation except OP asked for Zigbee which they aren’t.
Actually, just the shape. The bus itself is just a horrible mess.
https://gizmodo.com/usb-c-is-a-mess-how-to-navigate-it-1826978043
https://www.reddit.com/r/Jokes/comments/ux7try/a_russian_and_an_american_get_on_a_plane_in/