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  1. I've got an issue with #tailscale I have used a funnel for linkwarden do be able to reach it from outside my LAN without having e.g. cloudflare. It has worked flawlessly but a couple of days ago it stopped working. I first thought it was a firefox thing, but I have tried it with chromium and it does'nt solve the problem.
    I can ping the service (a docker container) and get answer back - but the TLS handshake fails. Anyone that has had the same problem and has a solution?
    #tailscale #funnel #error #tls #handshake

  2. @ironicbadger, borgbackup backup of all my servers in my home and on the Internet to rsync.net which is then rsync’ed down to my main home server running #ZFS. All Linux computers run ZFS, make backups using #sanoid and send to that server using #syncoid. I’m planning to set up a personal remote backup at my in-laws’ place which provides a ZFS send target over #Tailscale

  3. Tails 7.6.1 arriva d’urgenza per blindare Tor Browser

    Tails 7.6.1 è un aggiornamento di emergenza che patcha vulnerabilità critiche in Tor Browser 15.0.9. Scopri cosa cambia e come aggiornare in sicurezza.

    yoota.it/tails-7-6-1-arriva-du

  4. "Modern DRAM is based on a brilliant design from IBM.

    But, we're still paying for a latency penalty that's existed since the 60s!

    In this video, I'm introducing my personal research project (Tailslayer) that immensely reduces p99.99 latency on traditional RAM!

    By implementing a hedged read strategy taking advantage of (undocumented!) channel scrambling offsets, I've gotten as much as 15x reductions in tail latency.

    The technique works across Intel, AMD, Graviton, DDR4, DDR5, x86, ARM, you name it.

    Check out the C++ lib I wrote, watch the video, and try it yourself!"

    By @lauriewired who is frankly amazing 😄🖖

    youtu.be/KKbgulTp3FE

    #DRAM #Latency #TailSlayer

  5. OMG This of hands down the best yt video I have ever watched!

    Whether you're chasing that 99.99 percentile 400ns latency spike (which I am!) or just curious about how your computer's memory actually works (also me!) this was both super technical and ludicrously entertaining.

    youtu.be/KKbgulTp3FE

    #tailslayer

  6. OMG This of hands down the best yt video I have ever watched!

    Whether you're chasing that 99.99 percentile 400ns latency spike (which I am!) or just curious about how your computer's memory actually works (also me!) this was both super technical and ludicrously entertaining.

    youtu.be/KKbgulTp3FE

    #tailslayer

  7. OMG This of hands down the best yt video I have ever watched!

    Whether you're chasing that 99.99 percentile 400ns latency spike (which I am!) or just curious about how your computer's memory actually works (also me!) this was both super technical and ludicrously entertaining.

    youtu.be/KKbgulTp3FE

    #tailslayer

  8. OMG This of hands down the best yt video I have ever watched!

    Whether you're chasing that 99.99 percentile 400ns latency spike (which I am!) or just curious about how your computer's memory actually works (also me!) this was both super technical and ludicrously entertaining.

    youtu.be/KKbgulTp3FE

    #tailslayer

  9. 📝 Personal site infrastructure, diagrammed #Development #Webdev #Tech #Navidrome #Audiobookshelf #Tailscale

    That I even need and have made a diagram of the infrastructure for this site speaks to how over-engineered it is. Yet, while it is ostensibly a personal site, it's a personal site that's replaced many services that I previously used.

    coryd.dev/posts/2026/personal-

  10. I love #Tailscale, but their #Funnel product ist a very buggy piece of crap.

  11. I love #Tailscale, but their #Funnel product ist a very buggy piece of crap.

  12. I love #Tailscale, but their #Funnel product ist a very buggy piece of crap.

  13. I love #Tailscale, but their #Funnel product ist a very buggy piece of crap.

  14. Tailscale's new #macOS #Home is a convoluted mess wrapped in #buzzwords and #jargon. 🥱 They claim to have cracked "notch traversal"—whatever that is—but it's really just more #AI hand-waving and corporate fluff. 🤡 Good luck finding anything useful in this alphabet soup of #features. 👀
    tailscale.com/blog/macos-notch #Tailscale #critique #HackerNews #ngated

  15. Tails 7.6 gère automatiquement les ponts Tor pour lutter contre la censure
    next.ink/brief_article/tails-7

    La distribution Tails, axée sur la sécurité et la confidentialité, passe en version 7.6 avec comme principale nouveauté l’intégration des ponts Tor (Tor bridges en anglais) au niveau de l’assistant de connexion intégré au système.

    La version 7.6 signe également l’introduction de Secrets comme gestionnaire de mots de passe par défaut (en remplacement de KeePassXC), une décision motivée par son interface plus simple et sa meilleure intégration dans GNOME.

    #Tails #Tor #TorBrowser

  16. Here's a look at #Sonic Channel's new #sonicpict and calendar artwork for April 2026, featuring Miles "Tails" Prower and the students of Spagonia University. 🔗 twitter.com/SonicOfficia... #SonicNews

  17. Here's a look at #Sonic Channel's new #sonicpict and calendar artwork for April 2026, featuring Miles "Tails" Prower and the students of Spagonia University. 🔗 twitter.com/SonicOfficia... #SonicNews

  18. Here's a look at #Sonic Channel's new #sonicpict and calendar artwork for April 2026, featuring Miles "Tails" Prower and the students of Spagonia University. 🔗 twitter.com/SonicOfficia... #SonicNews

  19. Here's a look at #Sonic Channel's new #sonicpict and calendar artwork for April 2026, featuring Miles "Tails" Prower and the students of Spagonia University. 🔗 twitter.com/SonicOfficia... #SonicNews

  20. librarypunk.gay/e/160-sciopnet

    >And this is exactly why Linux distributions have been distributing ISOs using torrents for years. Aside from the sort of piracy thing, that's the other thing that BitTorrent gets used a lot for, and it means that the small organizations throwing up their own Linux distro can distribute it without it completely crashing their tiny servers.

    You're not wrong :P Pic related. It annoys me that #tails @tails recently moved away from having torrents as a form of downloading.

    >Yeah, it makes me, think about, and something I've thought about before but haven't really explored is you know how when you go on Archive.org and there's a file, and one of your options is just to download a torrent. Why don't we do that for institutional repositories and data repositories?

    That's one of my favourite parts of the Internet Archive :D

    >Because those are starting to get big. I mean, I know one of the reasons is because, like, we use proprietary software for our institutional repository and Clarabate and Elsevier don't want to support that.

    Elsevier, the bane of my academic existence.

    -----

    Also, vis-a-vis webseeds... what's stopping a Tor onion service from being the HTTP(S) endpoint? Those are pretty damn hard to bring down (from a legal standpoint). I'd assume the main limitation is that BitTorrent clients don't speak "onion service," but that's a fixable problem. Hell, what's stopping the trackers themselves from being onion services?

    #BitTorrent #SciOp #Tor #OnionService

  21. librarypunk.gay/e/160-sciopnet

    >And this is exactly why Linux distributions have been distributing ISOs using torrents for years. Aside from the sort of piracy thing, that's the other thing that BitTorrent gets used a lot for, and it means that the small organizations throwing up their own Linux distro can distribute it without it completely crashing their tiny servers.

    You're not wrong :P Pic related. It annoys me that #tails @tails recently moved away from having torrents as a form of downloading.

    >Yeah, it makes me, think about, and something I've thought about before but haven't really explored is you know how when you go on Archive.org and there's a file, and one of your options is just to download a torrent. Why don't we do that for institutional repositories and data repositories?

    That's one of my favourite parts of the Internet Archive :D

    >Because those are starting to get big. I mean, I know one of the reasons is because, like, we use proprietary software for our institutional repository and Clarabate and Elsevier don't want to support that.

    Elsevier, the bane of my academic existence.

    -----

    Also, vis-a-vis webseeds... what's stopping a Tor onion service from being the HTTP(S) endpoint? Those are pretty damn hard to bring down (from a legal standpoint). I'd assume the main limitation is that BitTorrent clients don't speak "onion service," but that's a fixable problem. Hell, what's stopping the trackers themselves from being onion services?

    #BitTorrent #SciOp #Tor #OnionService

  22. librarypunk.gay/e/160-sciopnet

    >And this is exactly why Linux distributions have been distributing ISOs using torrents for years. Aside from the sort of piracy thing, that's the other thing that BitTorrent gets used a lot for, and it means that the small organizations throwing up their own Linux distro can distribute it without it completely crashing their tiny servers.

    You're not wrong :P Pic related. It annoys me that #tails @tails recently moved away from having torrents as a form of downloading.

    >Yeah, it makes me, think about, and something I've thought about before but haven't really explored is you know how when you go on Archive.org and there's a file, and one of your options is just to download a torrent. Why don't we do that for institutional repositories and data repositories?

    That's one of my favourite parts of the Internet Archive :D

    >Because those are starting to get big. I mean, I know one of the reasons is because, like, we use proprietary software for our institutional repository and Clarabate and Elsevier don't want to support that.

    Elsevier, the bane of my academic existence.

    -----

    Also, vis-a-vis webseeds... what's stopping a Tor onion service from being the HTTP(S) endpoint? Those are pretty damn hard to bring down (from a legal standpoint). I'd assume the main limitation is that BitTorrent clients don't speak "onion service," but that's a fixable problem. Hell, what's stopping the trackers themselves from being onion services?

    #BitTorrent #SciOp #Tor #OnionService

  23. librarypunk.gay/e/160-sciopnet

    >And this is exactly why Linux distributions have been distributing ISOs using torrents for years. Aside from the sort of piracy thing, that's the other thing that BitTorrent gets used a lot for, and it means that the small organizations throwing up their own Linux distro can distribute it without it completely crashing their tiny servers.

    You're not wrong :P Pic related. It annoys me that #tails @tails recently moved away from having torrents as a form of downloading.

    >Yeah, it makes me, think about, and something I've thought about before but haven't really explored is you know how when you go on Archive.org and there's a file, and one of your options is just to download a torrent. Why don't we do that for institutional repositories and data repositories?

    That's one of my favourite parts of the Internet Archive :D

    >Because those are starting to get big. I mean, I know one of the reasons is because, like, we use proprietary software for our institutional repository and Clarabate and Elsevier don't want to support that.

    Elsevier, the bane of my academic existence.

    -----

    Also, vis-a-vis webseeds... what's stopping a Tor onion service from being the HTTP(S) endpoint? Those are pretty damn hard to bring down (from a legal standpoint). I'd assume the main limitation is that BitTorrent clients don't speak "onion service," but that's a fixable problem. Hell, what's stopping the trackers themselves from being onion services?

    #BitTorrent #SciOp #Tor #OnionService