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Awesome.


At home I go from the modem to a Firewalla and then break out to the WiFi. Our needs at home are pretty simple though.

https://firewalla.com

I have been quite happy with the experience.


i hope so at $100-$125/port


> i hope so at $100-$125/port

Ooof. pfSense on retired hardware is cheap, like free. Using them since 1.2.something. Mid 00's.


well, me too. I "wrote the book" - dsl|broadbandreports forum post - on how to set up ipcop and later pfsense on a virtual machine. However the old pfsense (my iso of that version is from 2010) doesn't support ipv6 correctly (if at all) - and the new version is DRM'd and owned by "netgate" and requires connectivity to install - which is something i can't provide in my environment, so i am unable to test all of the "new and improved" versions of the tools we knew and loved.


Visor


Ice is great. Took some fiddling but I have been stoked on it.


I've lost count of how many years I've owned a Bjango license. Amazing software.


One, two, three…Christ, 16 years here. This made me feel terrible. Thanks!


I think I paid for it a few times because it had been so long. I also got work to buy 12 licenses to monitor edit bays when they were overheating all the time. I could read the machines stats on an iPad!

Good times.


Paywalls are just exhausting.


Oddly the spoken recording of the article is above the paywall.


Those OS X reviews will go down in the history books of tech journalism.

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2009/08/mac-os-x-10-6/


My download was corrupt and macOS threw it in the trash. That's a first.


Same here -- I tried the x86 build as well with the same result.


Rails changed my life. I've yet to have as much fun making applications or tools as those golden RoR days. Such a cool community.


I love it.

Our workflow is built around removing the need for an office and technical infrastructure. We have live streams of our timeline output (video editing) and an open comms channel. Most of our team is pretty introverted, so it's a push to talk system. We mostly just leave notes in the chat if it doesn't warrant a full discussion.

Crude solutions are often the ones that get adopted.


I'm happy to hear that. I've just open sourced the server part, so you can play with it a little bit more! I will improve docs over the time, so it's easier to follow.


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