What Are You Doing Right Now
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@jaredbusch said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
When I setup my KVM system, I did nothing. When you make the VM, you just choose bridged -> macvtap and it works. The host cannot talk back, but that doesn't really matter.
Worked like a charm. At some point, I do intend to make a DNS server for my home lab, so I'll need to figure out how to get traffic flowing between that particular VM and my host.
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I finally had a YouTube ad that was actually targeted at me yesterday. An ad for AeroMexico. Today, it is back to not knowing who I am at all.
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Pumpkin carving
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Here is a new one, got this while following a link to Spiceworks from inside a SW email. The link lists as going directly to SW.
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I got that going to a few articles on The Register (from "the daily headlines" newsletter).
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Hanging out with the kids, investigating our Steam library.
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Watching Chicago Fire and Scorpion.
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I sometimes feel like best practices are thrown out of the window...
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/post/7315334 -
@dbeato said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
I sometimes feel like best practices are thrown out of the window...
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/post/7315334If they ever let it in the window in the first place.
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Sending reminders to the people who haven't setup their new voice mailboxes yet.
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Wondering how do people here apply certificates to internal websites?
e.g. A unifi controller, so when I visit https://unifi01 I don't get the warning.Do you use external provider like 123reg and buy a SSL cert or do something internal?
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@hobbit666 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Wondering how do people here apply certificates to internal websites?
e.g. A unifi controller, so when I visit https://unifi01 I don't get the warning.Do you use external provider like 123reg and buy a SSL cert or do something internal?
Normal old school certs from GoDaddy or Digicert apply easily to these situations, you create a CSR, export it, use that information on the cert providers website, export your cert from them, install it on your internal host - done.
This isn't so easy to do with Let's Encrypt. This is because LE needs to check your ownership of a website by having direct access to that website.
That said, assuming you do have a website, you can have LE include a SAN, which is your internal servername, export the cert from the externally facing site, after LE installs the cert, then import that cert to your internal server. Then manually do that process whenever the cert is updated on the external server.
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Everyone always blames not knowing Linux for not knowing computing basics. This thread he says he's all confused because it is Linux, but he obviously doesn't understand the Windows terms he's trying to use or just things like what a network is. He's literally mixing concepts like AD Domains and access points thinking that they are related. Understanding Windows at all would make Linux clear to him here.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Everyone always blames not knowing Linux for not knowing computing basics. This thread he says he's all confused because it is Linux, but he obviously doesn't understand the Windows terms he's trying to use or just things like what a network is. He's literally mixing concepts like AD Domains and access points thinking that they are related. Understanding Windows at all would make Linux clear to him here.
"What does "hardwired to the network" mean to you?"
My first question when reading his post.
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@dashrender Did start reading a guide on using Lets Encrypt but with some automation to renew the cert every x days.
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work, email,... research,.. and updating from Ubuntu 17.04 to 17.1..
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@eddiejennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Everyone always blames not knowing Linux for not knowing computing basics. This thread he says he's all confused because it is Linux, but he obviously doesn't understand the Windows terms he's trying to use or just things like what a network is. He's literally mixing concepts like AD Domains and access points thinking that they are related. Understanding Windows at all would make Linux clear to him here.
"What does "hardwired to the network" mean to you?"
My first question when reading his post.
Yeah, he's really struggling with the basics of like "what is a network".
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It's odd because, for Linux, being on a domain doesn't make sharing files between them easier. For the use case listed it would add near zero benefit.
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@coliver said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
It's odd because, for Linux, being on a domain doesn't make sharing files between them easier. For the use case listed it would add near zero benefit.
Nearly the same is true for Windows. Joining a domain doesn't alone make any file sharing happen.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Everyone always blames not knowing Linux for not knowing computing basics. This thread he says he's all confused because it is Linux, but he obviously doesn't understand the Windows terms he's trying to use or just things like what a network is. He's literally mixing concepts like AD Domains and access points thinking that they are related. Understanding Windows at all would make Linux clear to him here.
Wow. I read what he posted. He doesn't even seem to know what he wants/needs to do with the Raspberry Pis.