As a provider of open-source services, Klara focuses on the art of open software and community-driven development. We believe that in order to foster creativity and advance technology in an ethical fashion we must continue fueling the spirit of open source.
At Klara, we rely on a mix of specialists and community to deliver FreeBSD, ZFS and Arm development services. We help customers standardize their environments running on FreeBSD and ZFS, and accelerate their platforms based on FreeBSD, ZFS and Arm.
We are currently looking for:
- FreeBSD Kernel Hackers
- FreeBSD Operating System Developers
- OpenZFS Hackers
- Sys admins with FreeBSD/ZFS experience
Living permanently on 4G I couldn't get by without mosh. I have managed to do weeks of work with most+tmux+vim at times when ssh was too painful to use.
On mosh's note. It's great experience for slow connection. Totally agree. There is new ios client recently released client with mosh support build-in [1]. Happy user
UDP certainly is connectionless, but that doesn't mean a host can't call `connect` on a UDP scoket. In fact, it is encouraged[1]. I am going to quote the entire paragraph from the RFC, the guidelines document is a very good read if you plan to use UDP.
Succinctly, you should `connect` a UDP socket, it can simplify some calls and allows the application to receive ICMP errors
Many operating systems also allow a UDP socket to be connected, i.e., to bind a
UDP socket to a specific pair of addresses and ports. This is similar to the
corresponding TCP sockets API functionality. However, for UDP, this is only a
local operation that serves to simplify the local send/receive functions and to
filter the traffic for the specified addresses and ports. Binding a UDP socket
does not establish a connection -- UDP does not notify the remote end when a
local UDP socket is bound. Binding a socket also allows configuring options
that affect the UDP or IP layers, for example, use of the UDP checksum or the
IP Timestamp option. On some stacks, a bound socket also allows an application
to be notified when ICMP error messages are received for its transmissions
[RFC1122].
There was a short story on starshipsofa[1] with a similar premise. A research team working time travel are worried about massive energy events, so they plan their test runs to coincide with nuclear tests. I wish I could remember what it was called, it was rather good.
I have one of these, I got it purely to do a build like this inspired by someone else in the hackerspace. There must be a load of people that want hardware like this in and are in various stages of getting it.
I was reading some of the reverse engineered specs when the pocketchip was announced last year. My hope is to see more devices that fit the mold of what people want, rather than what will sell in the market.
It is getting easier to produce human scale hardware like the pocketchip, if we don't see more diverse hardware for more diverse users I shall be very upset.
I have a BQ E5 Ubuntu Edition(running android now) that I got nearly 1 month ago. Hardware has been okay so far, this phone has ram trouble with ubuntu touch.
It is okay running android, a little under powered I think.
I am not sure why anything uses DASH, but the problem isn't just limited to it. Http video streaming is quite hard to do well, a lot of clients struggle[0]
The Pirate Box[1] firmware is the perfect thing for this. The problem is finding power to keep the box running, but with wifi, you can hide the box somewhere out of site.
I have always thought it would be cool to set up a piratebox somewhere running from a solar panel. Then in daylight hours the dead drop would be there, but it would be gone at night.
There's an Android version in case you have old smartphones lying around. They're more powerful than the OpenWRT routers and they do have their own power. You need to root your phone first though.
The channel for my local hackerspace is quite active, but not so busy that you can't keep track of what is going on. I also loiter in some bsd channels that are reasonably active as well.
It probably helps to find channels that have a purpose behind them.
Jim Killock(Director of ORG) toured around Scotland last week to talk about a Scottish National Identity scheme. The audio I recorded of him is on the internet archive here[1]
As a provider of open-source services, Klara focuses on the art of open software and community-driven development. We believe that in order to foster creativity and advance technology in an ethical fashion we must continue fueling the spirit of open source.
At Klara, we rely on a mix of specialists and community to deliver FreeBSD, ZFS and Arm development services. We help customers standardize their environments running on FreeBSD and ZFS, and accelerate their platforms based on FreeBSD, ZFS and Arm.
We are currently looking for:
- FreeBSD Kernel Hackers - FreeBSD Operating System Developers - OpenZFS Hackers - Sys admins with FreeBSD/ZFS experience