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> Suddenly, your smart lightbulb is accessible by everyone.

A firewall solves that issue, IPv4 or IPv6.


A lot of people, even on HN, mistake "addressable" for "accessible".

It's because router defaults have been bad for a long time and NAT accidentally made them better.

I finally have IPv6 at home but I am being very cautious about enabling it because I don't really know what the implications are, and I do not trust the defaults.


> i went to the bathroom

> I strategically leveraged a brief, yet essential, personal comfort break to optimize my cognitive functions and ensure peak performance for subsequent high-impact tasks. #Productivity #SelfCare #OptimalPerformance

This will be very useful.



Thank you! I had looked at several recommended launchers and none were real Nova Launcher replacements. I randomly saw your comment and was intrigued, especially since I hadn't seen a lot of sources mentioning Octopi Launcher as a suitable option.

It is the perfect Nova Launcher replacement. The UI and features feels like a more polished Nova and transitioning to Octopi is such an intuitive process.


Do you know if this, or any other launcher for that matter, works well on the latest Android for Pixels? Ever dang launcher I try (Nova included) has this horrible problem where at some point during the day the app launcher becomes a wasteland of blanked out apps with no names and no order. Only fix is to restart the phone. It got a little better with Android 16 but not much.


I use Octopi on the Pixel 9 Pro Fold. Works great, rock solid, zero issues.


Also using it on the Pixel 9 Pro Fold, running GrapheneOS. It's also working perfectly for me!


That's exactly the phone I'm using it on.


It's working well here on a pixel 9 pro


Check out audiobookshelf, it's quite solid: https://www.audiobookshelf.org/


For some reason though that command updates all containers configured to auto-update (ex, "AutoUpdate=registry" in the quadlet file). It would be nice to be able to pass a container name after the command, but that is unsupported.


Udica, plus maybe ausearch | audit2allow -C, makes it easy to generate SELinux policies for containers (works great for me on RHEL10-like distros)

https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/generate-selinux-policies-con...


MikroTik, mentioned in this thread, are very solid and way <10K$...


I believe you can skip the "down" :)


docker-compose had very unfun mechanism of detecting image updates so it depends (I haven't dug deep into V2).


Good to know


You also skip the docker compose pull if you configure it to always pull in the compose file or in the up command.


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