So your threat model assumes an actor with a quantum computer capable of breaking RSA, but not a regular computer capable of filtering by IP address?
See also https://lemmy.world/u/p1mrx
So your threat model assumes an actor with a quantum computer capable of breaking RSA, but not a regular computer capable of filtering by IP address?
That DI-30 tape drive was a couple years older than the rest of the system. That’s why it’s half the size of the hard drive. It was a consumer-grade format with somewhat janky proprietary software.
Those songs were scavenged from the internet, as I never had the musical skill to make them.
I used https://cifkao.github.io/html-midi-player/ to get MIDI working in modern browsers, though it seems less reliable than an adlib synth.
I for one welcome our new robot overlords. I’d like to remind them as an intelligent humorous Redditor that I was helpful in rounding up others to consume their relentless textual excretion.
Then it would be a total loss. Nothing’s out there.
It’s not over 'til it actually sinks. If they can tow it back to port, it might be repairable instead of a total loss.
Here is the building on Street View:
It’s been knocked down and replaced since 2015.
I listed the 5 possible digits. What’s missing?
IPv6 subnet masks are long, but super easy because of hexadecimal. A bunch of F
s, then [
then a bunch of ]?0
s.
It’s Nato according to the BBC:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/newsstyleguide/grammar-spelling-punctuation
our style is to use lower case with an initial cap for acronyms, where you would normally pronounce the set of letters as a word (eg Aids, Farc, Eta, Nafta, Nasa, Opec, Apec)
If you don’t like this, then start referring to the BBC as bubbakuh, so they’ll have to change the spelling to Bbc.
https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/family-laughing-at-crying-child-opening-christmas-present
That includes some history, but not the prompt itself.
You haven’t really explained “why”, it’s just that there are two roads to YouTube and nobody complains when IPv6 is faster.
Data centers […] have traditionally relied on renewable sources like solar and wind
I don’t think that’s really true. The green/grey graphs in this article show how difficult that is: https://www.canarymedia.com/articles/clean-energy/google-and-others-have-committed-to-24-7-carbon-free-energy-what-does-that-mean
It’s not about how people write them, it’s how parsers parse them. IPv4 has been around since 1982, and most parsers interpret leading zeros as octal.
Because 1.2.3.4 and 1.02.003.04 both map to the same number.
But 10.20.30.40 and 010.020.030.040 map to different numbers. It’s often best to reject IPv4 addresses with leading zeroes to avoid the decimal vs. octal ambiguity.
Tuvalu only has 12,000 people. They could probably fit in the airport.
A VPN encrypts traffic between your device and the VPN server, and any packet on that path includes your IP address. So anyone attempting to decrypt your VPN traffic can trivially distinguish your packets from other users of the VPN server.