You cannot plug in any old power source, but you can with special micro inverters.
You cannot plug in any old power source, but you can with special micro inverters.
If you happen to have a Fritzbox with VoIP capability it contains a SIP server and you can register SIP clients on it (e.g. Fritz App Fon, linphone, twinkle) and use them to phone internally.
You can use your phone with mobile connection (not WiFi) to check if it can see the file that you made available on your web server.
If you can’t guess it, you could read the first sentence of the article.
As I understand it, this European Court of Human Rights has nothing to do with the EU.
This article is about the international court of the Council of Europe (not of the European Union). For the EU’s judicial branch, see Court of Justice of the European Union. For the supreme court of the EU in matters of Union law, see European Court of Justice.
Everybody and their grandma is in the Council of Europe, except for Vatican City, Belarus and Russia. And the UK was a founding member of the Council of Europe, so their leaving the EU shouldn’t change a thing regarding this court.
Why not for the UK? It’s a founding member state.
The court has jurisdiction amongst the member states of the Council of Europe which includes almost every country in Europe except for Vatican City, Belarus and Russia.
You’re correct that it won’t draw 650W. You could get a power meter or a power measuring plug and measure the energy consumption.
I don’t know how Entware works, but probably it installed rsync not in /usr/bin, but somewhere else. Find it somehow (e.g. by running find / -name rsync
).
rsync has a command line option --rsync-path.
I’d guess that the reverse proxy would run on a cheap VPS with an IPv4, and connect to your home through a VPN like wireshark.
I think your understanding is mostly correct. But I never heard that you can get an ISP to port-forward through their CGNAT. Either you get a public IPv4 address or not.
IPv6 would work, but then only clients with IPv6 can connect. And I just read that there are still people with IPv4-only routers in 2023.
Have a look at Tailscale and Zerotier, I think they are often used to poke through CGNAT.
From your Linux systems you could run grub-set-default or grub-reboot. I don’t know if there’s a version for Windows.
I use FreshRSS and FeedMe on the phone.
In Germany we have a trial run of food delivery. A drone will bring a package with up to 4.5 kg to a “remote” village, then some students on e-bikes will bring it to the houses. Why they are using drones instead of one lorry a day is unknown.
Don’t put it in /usr/bin, that’s where your package manager puts executables, not you. Other than that, do what you want. /usr/local/bin is good, or if it’s only for your user ~/bin, ~/local/bin or ~/.local/bin - I don’t care. Also just let your users decide where they want to put the script.
I don’t know how it works with your or OP’s router, but my router has a firewall for IPv6, too. There’s no NAT for IPv6, so if I open a port I have to use the server’s IP address, and that’s also the IP address that I have to use from the outside.
At least Android devices are not firewalled in any way. Even with the latest Android 14 I can run servers like ssh/ftp/ScreenStream locally on the phone.
There’s a firewall/NAT on the phone network, but in the local network it’s perfectly possible to connect to other phones (unless the local network has client isolation).
The second car here is a Tesla, and it still runs at the other side of the ford (but we don’t know for how long). But I agree, driving through rain should not damage a car.
Check if your Provider uses CGNAT. And I don’t understand why you opened port 22-29 instead of just one port.
UK was in the EU for the most part of my adulthood, so I didn’t need a passport (I’m from Germany).
Did you try to search for “would dictionary”? Also you could search for “would your_language”.