

Ah that reminds me of the time every single file on my computer got replaced with a .vbs version of itself. Good times.


Ah that reminds me of the time every single file on my computer got replaced with a .vbs version of itself. Good times.
My favorite!


I feel like celebrating only on February 29th during a leap year makes the most sense. If someone was born on February 29, then that’s their birthday and their rate of aging is slowed by %80.


No this is Patrick.
Where are you finding then for $25-$35? Ebay has them going for $70+


Check your firewall logs (Status -> System Logs -> Firewall for pfSense, can’t remember for opnsense). I’d suspect you might see blocks from 10.0.66.x to your Playstation.


Of course.


Its okay. Try mine!

Do either routers support going into what’s called an AP access mode instead of router? If they do then you could put one into access point mode and run a patch cable between the two.
You may also be able to load DD-wrt on them but checking https://dd-wrt.com/support/router-database/ it doesn’t look like either have support.


Yeah, I think people want to keep the momentum going. Without interaction any alternatives are bound to die. I think it’s pretty cool that you’re more likely to get engagement since things are still so new and it’s small enough that you can actually see comments like mine and expect someone to respond.
There’s been a few hickups I’ve seen but with how fast this is all evolving it really is pretty quick and most issues seem to resolve themselves so it’s been impressive so far.


It has a ton of potential. I really hope it takes off because even if it doesn’t replace Reddit immediately it’s good to have another place to communicate with others. I have a tech background so it was fairly easy to figure out. I think once folks get used to it that it will be no more difficult than other social media sites. Mobile users will probably have the hardest time adapting but who knows.
Same with stuff that needs to be frozen or refrigerated. Makes it that much easier to put things away when you’re back home.