I don’t want to speculate as to the fate of the baby, the corrugated sheet metal had to be moved and it was only a few minutes after I had removed it that we heard the squeaking. Nature is gonna nature, either the squirrel will survive, or a predator will get an easy meal. The thing is, within the family, we will probably ask “is that the squirrel all grown up?” every time we see a squirrel up there for the next few years. I think that’s the best outcome we can hope for.
El Dorado county in California, just north of Placerville, on a hill above the banks of the South fork of the American River.
It had a long worm-like tail. If it was smaller I would have thought mouse, but the leading theories are squirrel or mole.
If people are ok with that then I guess it will stand, but it’s insane and anti-consumer in my book. A product costs what it costs, based on supply and demand, and if you can’t afford it you don’t buy it. This flimsy premise of “It lowers the bar to entry so users can upgrade later without having to replace!” will never come to fruition, and it’s too slippery of a slope to “put in a quarter to turn on your A/C”.
That is insane. If it costs the same to make, then lower range isn’t a reasonable area to pitch a lower cost vehicle. Wanting to lower the cost is fine. Putting in cheaper/smaller components to get there is fine. If you are using the same components and just software locking them to nickle and dime the users later, that’s anti-consumer and should not be tolerated. I can’t believe how people look at micro-transactions in games and think “wouldn’t this be cool with IRL stuff?”
My setup is a bit extreme, but here are my guardrails:
I built my kids potato computers from the time they were 3-5, which was during covid. They need computer skills nowadays, and it put them at an advantage for covid school. We got them on java Minecraft which was huge for reading, typing, and some basic math skills (they figured out multiplication for crafting things like doors). I made a chart which had icons of things they want, with the word next to it, so they could search and type in creative.
We used Ubuntu Mate. It’s simple, stable, and familiar. They do NOT have sudo on these boxes. As we’ve advanced, they now have firefox (behind a pihole which upstreams to opendns’ family protect), gimp (with a wacom tablet!), inkscape, calculators, tenacity, libre office, and they’re starting to get into some cad to make things to 3d print. You have to come to terms with doing a LOT of patient hand holding, but it has paid off dividends.
To be clear, this is a subset of the lunchables brand specifically manufactured and sent to schools for lunches, which has a higher sodium content than the retail variety you can buy. They don’t want to ban all lunchables
Huge bummer that they’re all 5+ years old. We’ve been moving to libreelec with Disney+, Jellycon, Netflix, Youtube, and amazon prime plugins. It’s not the same, but it’s workable. If Amazon keeps MatterCast open and open source implementations get made, that’s where I’m focusing my attention. A raspberry pi with libreelec that can be a casting target feels, to me, like the holy grail:
https://www.theverge.com/2024/1/9/24030324/amazon-matter-casting-echo-show-fire-tv-prime-video
No joke can you share those results? I’m holding out for matter cast
We tried to host it ourselves to save cost, and it’s a beast but it mostly works. It certainly lags behind in features and uses a lot of resources, but when you compare with the cost it’s certainly passable.
Lego parts are incredibly precise, and the manufacturing tolerances have been consistent for decades. It’s nearly impossible to replicate that precision on any modern printers.
That being said, different parts are more tolerant of wiggle room. Grabbing a stud is hard, grabbing a 2x4 is not. If you were going to print a minifig head, trying to replicate the neck barrel is gonna be tough, but making a larger hole with 2-3 ridges which taper to grip might be easier. If you plan what you’re doing and are realistic about what you can print, it’s definitely not out of the question.
Lego is ABS if I’m correct.
The headline does not do justice…like this is tied to the cult that the former prime minister of Japan was assassinated over.
He is allowed to state his personal opinions despite being the leadership of one of the most populous state. I appreciate that opinion.
Ok, good news, I re-imaged and after about an hour of tinkering it’s working. (My wife is a doctor who does tele-medicine from home so it was tricky to get a downtime, even riskier if I couldn’t get back to working; usually she works when kids are in bed and that usually my window for these kind of projects). I still have my old config backup; I have a lot of firewall rules and services to put back in (I had redirects for google trying to reach their dns from chromecasts to my pihole, I had a zabbix client pointing to my zabbix server, I had wireguard working and want to see if I can restore existing key exchanges, it was tied to my LDAP server, etc). I really want to compare my old backup with a new one when this is done and see if I can’t figure out what was broken. I want to document that because I found a bunch of people with similar questions that only had incomplete answers:
With this, LAN clients access the WAN, after putting in a port forward WAN clients can access things on the LAN, the firewall can ping both LAN and WAN.
If I go to my LAN interface and set the gateway to “LAN_GW” at 10.99.1.254, everything works (but I can’t ping anything on the LAN from the firewall itself, including the client I’m ssh’d from). If I set that to Auto, all LAN clients lose WAN access.
I’ve got a backup, but I think I’m gonna try to rebuild from scratch :/ I just worry I’m gonna end up in the same spot since I don’t understand how it all got here and don’t know what to avoid.
I’m totally with you…and I have that, which is why I think I’m hitting some sort of bug, or a firewall rule that is somehow breaking this:
I probably need to burn it down and restart, but I need to find a time the family will tolerate an extended outage. I did share some things on the opnsense forum though which might be useful here.
It feels like somehow opnsense is treating LAN like WAN or something? I don’t know the obfuscation feels like it’s hiding things. A “ping -S 10.99.1.40 10.2.2.213” shouldn’t show in the logs with a source of the WAN address, right???
Ok, it’s definitely an issue with the firewall not sending traffic from itself to LAN. It’s weird, it’s passing traffic, but it cannot ping or access anything on the LAN including things on the 99 VLAN (so it’s local VLAN). The DNS requests are for sure failing from the firewall…but they work fine for the rest of the LAN. Any client can get a DNS response from the DNS server on the 2 VLAN, and can access the resulting site.
For now, I’m just excluding the wireguard thing, I think it’s a distraction to the problem that the firewall has some sort of bad routing going on.
I have a diagram, but at this point it’s pretty local to the firewall itself and I think it’s around the gateway/route configuration. I got some advice on the opnsense forum that my static routes are wrong; they say to make a single static route of 10.0.0.0/8 instead of one for each VLAN, turn off “upstream gateway” on the LAN GW (which when I do that I lose all WAN connectivity…which is a concern but I can revert). When I do the cli configuration, and I assign an IP for LAN, it asks if I want to put a gateway; it kind of says “it should be yes for wan, but no for LAN” but if I do no, I can’t access the internet from any clients, and if I do yes, it ticks “upstream gateway” on the lan gateway. Something is awry, but I’m gonna try again after making some static route changes.
Part of the free-market attitude though is that you should be allowed to buy policy, so in that regard it’s consistent, you just have to account for corruption in the cost of doing business.