Thea (netbook), Athena (always the primary laptop), Atemis (ex athena, so named cause there was a newspaper article with a pair of TBMs called artemis and athena when I was trying to decide what to rename it), Nyx, Juno (always the oldest desktop - currently the shared desktop, tho, Nyx's predecessor was also a juno)
Nyx is my daytime/home machine I use athena as a laptop or after dark. Thea tends to be what I throw in my backpack going out
It's fairly simple to set up... if you have tons of PHP boxen already. Quite flexible with authentication sytsems and does support unique links and public sharing
Performance was fairly meh over SMB mounted network drives mind you, but that could be are SAN being shite.
> Our first order of business was to terminate the “DevShare” program. As of last week, the DevShare program was completely eliminated. The DevShare program delivered installer bundles as part of the download for participating projects. We want to restore our reputation as a trusted home for open source software, and this was a clear first step towards that.
'Hiring for diversity' implies you pick someone over someone else of equal or better skill not because they're skilled but because they belong to a different social category.
@Bob Arguably, the whole "taking over abandoned accounts and injecting adware into their downloads" was as much a political decision as a technical one
I'm pretty sure I downloaded something recently where they moved from Souceforge but SF kept hosting their stuff anyway, and they said "Our independent site is the ONLY official source, do NOT download from Sourceforge."
> In 2013, the FileZilla project's lead developer Tim Kosse authorized SourceForge to put an offer-producing installer around the project's download file. When someone expressed concern about the adware installer in the FileZilla forum, Kosse replied, "This is intentional. The installer does not install any spyware and clearly offers you a choice whether to install the offered software." He added that an unbundled installer was still available on FileZilla's official download page.
Personally I just use old/spare laptops. They have all the attributes required - full x86 capabilities, built-in WLAN + LAN, lower energy consumption, quiet, and as a plus, have a full physical console.
My recent Lenovo 700 didn't have an Ethernet port, even though the cheaper Lenovo 500 has. Oddly, the Thinkpad Yoga 14 doesn't have Ethernet either.
High-end Lenovo 700 - No ethernet, Micro HDMI. Mid-range Lenovo 500 - Gigabit Ethernet, full-size HDMI, more USB ports. Business Thinkpad Yoga - No ethernet, full-size HDMI, less USB ports :-/
Most enterprise routers only use one port, connected to a switch with VLAN based port segregation.
And pretty much all consumer routers and laptops do support VLANs with the right drivers.
Plus in reality, most consumer routers are actually a one-port router connected to an internal port of a 5-8 port switch
The WAN port is just a VLAN tagged port on the router's internal switch, as are all the LAN ports, and the CPU port.
In practical terms I'm just pulling the CPU-heavy workload out of the Netgear box and putting it on an x86 CPU. The CPU in the router only has a single port connection to the swithc, so does my laptop.