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00:02
It's now Process-Architecture-Optimization.
For 14nm, Broadwell is the Process stage, Skylake is the Architecture stage, and Kaby Lake is the Optimization stage.
Bob
Bob
00:19
Anyone ever used Bitvise SSH Server?
Or otherwise set up an SSH server on Windows?
00:30
@Bob Cygwin ;p
00:43
@Bob: Yes
Bob
Bob
@allquixotic That's a whole lot of cruft just for SSH tunneling...
Looks like it only accepts a single forward. I need two. Dammit.
The requests aren't rejected. Logs all say they're accepted fine.
They just never appear.
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek ?
I misunderstood which way the data was flowing
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek ?
00:54
I was gonna say "use two instances of putty"
;p
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek Yeaaaaaa... tried that.
The idea is I need to forward a local port (e.g. 3391) to remote localhost:3389.
I also need to forward a remote port (e.g. 8080) to local localhost:8080
So I'm pretty much looking at alternatives now :P
FreeSSHd looks pretty lightweight.
Bob
Bob
01:23
Ok. FreeSSHd is about as reliable as bashing your head into a wall.
OpenSSH!
Though truth be told, if what you want is port forwarding demanding an SSH daemon seems like an XY problem
@kerbalspacebecky depends on what you mean by port forwarding
I think he wants port tunneling
hmm
@Bob windows on both ends?
Bob
Bob
There. Got FreeSSHd working.
@JourneymanGeek It's quite literally called "port forwarding" in SSH.
Bob
Bob
   The connection protocol provides channels that can be used for a wide
   range of purposes.  Standard methods are provided for setting up
   secure interactive shell sessions and for forwarding ("tunneling")
   arbitrary TCP/IP ports and X11 connections.
01:33
My dad's convinced I'm working too hard at moving the books.
Bob
Bob
I don't mean port forwarding in the NAT sense :P
Bob
Bob
@kerbalspacebecky Goal: Connect to RDP via port 443, and connect back to an arbitrary port (80, 8080, whatever) in the other direction without control over the local firewall.
The standard *nix way afaik is to use SSH.
Not a clue what the standard Windows way would be.
@JourneymanGeek Hmmm maaaaaybe
It's complicated by the fact that I want to connect to 3389 on the remote, but it must go through 443
So on the remote I could do 443 to 3389.
But then I can't do anything about the connection going the other way.
@JourneymanGeek He'd rather you work on moving the young goat?
@Bob Well, SSH isn't the "standard" way, it's the lazy way that people use because it's easy and it's already there.
The "proper" way would be to use a native L2-L4 tunnelling protocol.
Bob
Bob
01:55
@kerbalspacebecky Hm, I've not seen any that work on the port/socket level.
Most are L2/L3.
Not sure I've ever heard of an L4 one.
There's even L5 (SOCKS)
Speaking of OSI, Cisco have re-introduced their CCNP Wireless certification it seems.
According to them, "Salaries and Demand Are At An All Time High", yet when I wanted to take the cert, it had been withdrawn due to lack of demand -_-
Bob
Bob
@kerbalspacebecky And those work in this specific case (i.e. one specific port forwarded in each direction, both going through the same socket)?
AFAIK that's not something SOCKS can do.
I could run more servers, but $$$
Realistically, what you want is called a VPN
Bob
Bob
Especially since this is supposed to be low-latency (Sydney) and servers here are more like $$$$$$$$$$
@kerbalspacebecky The VPNs I'm familiar with are all L2/L3.
In this particular case I could probably use an L3 route.
For added complexity, of course.
I could, but I probably shouldn't.
02:39
@Bob heh, he's afraid I'd pull a muscle or something. About when I've moved nearly everything that needed to be moved.
._.
Other than a physical encyclopedia....
Bob
Bob
Hm. The i3 Latitude sold for $167
Bob
Bob
worf
02:53
hands @kerbalspacebecky a bag
barfs in it and hands it back to @JourneymanGeek
puts it in @kerbalspacebecky's back pocket
puts pocket over @JourneymanGeek's head
blah
Unrelatedly
I need to decide whether I want to throw out my atom 230
Bob
Bob
@kerbalspacebecky Do you get airsick? :P
Bob
Bob
Well, that explains all the flights :P
I don't get any sick
Except maybe on the Oculus Rift
Bob
Bob
o.O
Hm. Apparently my G4 is scheduled to fail within the next month.
0_0
Whaaaaa?
Bob
Bob
Bootloop bug.
Typical lifetime is 5-6 months.
On the plus side, I have a good idea what replacement I want and can just walk out and buy one.
03:04
ow
5-6 months means warranty replacement tho?
Bob
Bob
On the minus side, I'm missing a bunch of backups, and I don't know which shop I want to buy from.
@JourneymanGeek The risks of grey imports. Also the whole root thing.
ahh
I don't typically root until I'm out of warranty
Bob
Bob
Actually, if it happens within 6 months I could get it repaired under the credit card insurance... if I bought it on the right card.
@JourneymanGeek Titanium Backup.
Unfortunately, I can't find a good root-free replacement.
This is the first phone where I didn't really need root.
Dunno... if I go back to Samsung...
Ohhhhhhh I didn't have RDP 8.x at work. That explains why I never had the auto-resizing thing before. (cc @kerbalspacebecky)
*installs optional update*
Looks like it adds support for aero snap too
Lol noob mistake
Bob
Bob
@kerbalspacebecky I didn't even know it was a thing! :P
03:22
._.
sliced my finger on the old case
decision made ;p
Bob
Bob
O_o
@Bob Noob mistake!
Of course Microsoft is going to force you to upgrade to get ... anything
Wrong channel
03:55
So many questions
I can't wait to be done with this darn CompTIA exam
04:09
Was fiddling with some printer floor samples at retail, found that Brother inkjet printers do not have any kind of mechanical keying for the ink cartridges. This is not good.
I was able to insert a cyan cartridge into the yellow slot.
Pretty sure the printer would reject it at the firmware level but being able to contaminate one ink channel with the wrong type of ink is bad design.
The Epson and HP cartridges I've worked with are in fact keyed and it is not possible to insert a cartridge into the wrong slot.
Good practical joke..Just replace everything with Red ink.
:-)
or Cyan, or yellow
> NOTE: It may require 10 to 15 cleanings to clean the ink tubes and print head. During the cleaning process, the ink in the cartridge(s) will be consumed. Additional ink cartridges may be required to complete the cleaning process.
Wow. That's absolutely deficient design.
That is enough for me to recommend against buying a Brother inkjet printer.
0
Q: Configure Local Policies:Security Options:Network security on Windows Home (7 or later)

Marcin KI need to configure a Windows 7 Home machine to connect to a VPN Server. This requires the following configuration: Local Policies > Security Options Network Security: Minimum session security for NTLM SSP based (including secure RPC) clients disable "Require 128-bit encryption" In Win...

anyone have a link to the duplicate of that question?
04:28
Tested some Brother inkjets, managed to insert cartridge into wrong slot. This is bad design, cartridges should be keyed! @BrotherOffice
Somebody tell me they see an error in the following:
The MD5 hashing algorithm is used by NTLM2 authentication. MD5 stands for Message-Digest algorithm 5. It uses a 128-bit key and is a widely used hashing algorithm. LM hash is used with passwords of 14 or fewer characters.



If you use a password of 15 characters or more on newer versions of Windows, the OS will store a constant string as the LM hash, which is effectively a null password, and thereby uncrackable. The real password will be stored as an NTLM2 hash and (in this case calculated with MD5) will be used solely.
Question:
Your organization has a policy that states that user passwords must be at least 16 characters. Your computers use NTLM2 authentication for clients. Which of the following hash algorithms will be used for password authentication?
I selected LM Hash, I don't understand, how MD5 is the correct answer.
04:44
> One oddity: None of the ink cartridges are keyed; you can put them in the wrong slot. The unit performs normally anyway, but we're surprised at this oversight.
> [...] you do have to be careful when inserting the colour ink cartridges - without physical keying, it's possible to put one into the wrong slot.
> [...] since the bays are not keyed, you might insert the wrong cartridge in the wrong bay--and print bizarrely colored images. We can't believe that Brother hasn't idiot-proofed this area, though the company says that it has had no complaints and assures us that switching colors won't damage the printer.
Bob
Bob
@Ramhound Because
> LM hash is used with passwords of 14 or fewer characters.
Beat me to it ^^
Bob
Bob
> user passwords must be at least 16 characters
Actually, even ignoring that...
> Your computers use NTLM2 authentication for clients. Which of the following hash algorithms will be used for password authentication?
But... "If you use a password of 15 characters or more on newer versions of Windows, the OS will store a constant string as the LM hash"
Bob
Bob
@Ramhound Which is not used.
04:52
What isn't used?
Bob
Bob
The computers use NTLM2. Which hash is used? The hash NTLM is based on. Oh wait, that's MD5.
There's your answer.
@Ramhound The LM hash.
The constant string is the same for every account
It's not "used for authentication".
Alright.
Bob
Bob
Actually, if I wanted to be pedantic...
Modern Windows doesn't even store LM hashes anymore.
The missing information is the fact the hash is the same for every account.
Bob
Bob
@Ramhound TBH that's because I've heard of this before :P
@Ramhound FYI, LM hashes are also disabled as of Vista.
So they're not enabled by default on any supported Windows OS now.
04:55
Ok
Bob
Bob
Except Server 2003 for another month or so...
So besides the fact its a null password, and constant across all accounts, its not even used. Plus its since the password is larger then 15 characters MD5 password authentication will be used
Bob
Bob
@Ramhound Ok. Let me cover all bases.
Alright; Sure I appreciate it :-)
Bob
Bob
@Ramhound Firstly. As of Vista, LM hashes aren't even stored. Secondly. Even on XP, LM hashes aren't stored if it's > 14 characters. Thirdly. LM hashes aren't actually used for auth unless you're running some ungodly old version of Windows (pre-2000, for sure. Maybe even 95.) They are stored for backwards-compat purposes on XP.
Actually, I need to correct myself... seems that XP continued to include LM hash-derived keys as well, for certain network auth tasks.
Now, in the context of some cert exam... it probably hasn't been updated since 2000 anyway :P
04:59
Alright. So basically LM Hashes are not even used nor have they ever been used for password authentication (more or less)
Bob
Bob
So in your case, focus on the second point. LM hashes aren't used if > 14 chars because that's the max length.
@Ramhound They were used in the 90s. And that continued on some third-party products that weren't updated for NTLMv2 for a while.
If you're doing a cert exam, it may well be set in the 90s... I dunno.
These are HP 950/951 cartridges. Notice how they're keyed.
Bob
Bob
If we go purely by the info you're given, the simple answer is the LM hash is not used because the password is longer than 14 chars.
I can't believe that Brother has neglected to do anything like this to prevent cartridges from being inserted into the wrong slot.
Bob
Bob
Since it definitely used only NTLMv2, and you're given the info that NTLMv2 is based on MD5, if MD5 is an answer option then that's what was used.
Though to be technically correct, NTLMv2 is not the same thing as MD5, so the more specific answer of NTLMv2 is more correct than MD5.
05:02
@Bob - Security+ is used by orgnaization to determine who can or cannot be a sys admin.
Bob
Bob
@Ramhound Meanwhile, my (good!) security courses went over all the interesting history but focused on practical attacks/vulns on modern systems...
I am required to become a sys admin
I know 90% of the material
I know the different between syn and async encryption, might not know which algos are sync or aync but i know the good algos from the bad algos
Know how most of those algos work, might not recall they are async or sync off hand, but could identify them
Point is i hate exams :$
Bob
Bob
If you're interested in the weaknesses of LM, it's actually related to the newer WPS PIN weakness. And kinda related to Adobe's use of ECB encryption on passwords.
Password storage/verification protip: treat the password as a whole.
I know enough about LM Hash to know, if its enabled, it should be disabled and the person who enabled it should be taken out back and shot
:-)
Bob
Bob
If you take a N-char password and split it in half to hash/verify the two halves separately, suddenly instead of 2^N brute force you now have 2^((N/2)+1) attack.
05:06
Why on earth do people still use MD5? It's trivial to generate collisions with regular consumer computer hardware.
Bob
Bob
So a 14-char password would take 2^8 instead of 2^14
@bwDraco FYI, MD5 is still preimage-resistant. For the purpose of password storage, the vuln to collisions actually isn't important.
The real problem there is that it's too fast, and SHA1 and SHA256 aren't really better.
SHA3 is worse because it's even faster, IIRC.
@bwDraco "key-stretched SHA" is also wrong.
Don't do that kind of thing manually.
Use a well-defined construct like PBKDF2.
scrypt is considered probably the best at the moment, but is a newcomer so isn't quite as tested yet
bcrypt is what I usually see recommended if possible
PBKDF2 if you need FIPS
@bwDraco Because you are, in a sense, rolling your own crypto.
:28478944 Salting is a trivial concern now.
Would hate to spread bad advice; removed.
Bob
Bob
The only use of salting is to prevent rainbow-table type attacks. It's not a panacea.
Salting should still be used, for sure.
But you can't expect it to defend against everything. Or even most things. In fact it just defends against one thing.
Of course not. I know salting is used to make precomputation of hashes infeasible.
Bob
Bob
@bwDraco The reason it's better to use PBKDF2 (in a trusted library) is that it minimises your chances of making mistakes.
Even though it's effectively doing something similar to key-stretched SHA1 (usually - you can swap out the HMAC)
05:12
65,536 is no longer enough :$
Bob
Bob
:28478970 You actually want to choose your iterations at deployment time, for the max that your hardware can bear in normal operation (with some headroom).
Iterations are not a magic number.
Well you want to do more then that in today's environment
So why doesn't PBKDF2 use this sort of crypto primitive?
Bob
Bob
@bwDraco It does. The point is it's a well-defined scheme with robust libraries, rather than using the primitives yourself to come up with something.
One day we might discover that PBKDF2 is weak for some reason. Or some major lib has vulns. But the chance of that happening is actually generally lower than someone's home-grown attempt being broken in some way.
PBKDF2, HMAC-SHA-512 with 65,536 iterations; why isn't this enough?
Bob
Bob
05:14
@bwDraco It might it. It might not be. You can't know that until you test it.
It might be too much, even, depending on where you use it.
These hashing algorithms are strong in part because they take awhile to compute.
Bob
Bob
Thomas had a great security.se answer about this actually
The more iterations you perform the stronger they become.
Bob
Bob
Here it is.
127
A: Recommended # of iterations when using PKBDF2-SHA256?

Thomas PorninYou should use the maximum number of rounds which is tolerable, performance-wise, in your application. The number of rounds is a slowdown factor, which you use on the basis that under normal usage conditions, such a slowdown has negligible impact for you (the user will not see it, the extra CPU c...

@bwDraco There may well be a weakness discovered in the future.
Security is an ever-evolving field.
Okay, it's starting to make sense. Protection against cracking passwords relies on slowing the attacker down more than anything else. Then again, a weakness in the underlyng HMAC can cause the system to fail nonetheless.
Bob
Bob
05:17
That's one reason you can't fix the number of iterations, actually.
@bwDraco Yes, the attack we try to prevent by using a higher work factor is the fairly primitive brute force.
If someone discovers a way to break the hash, i.e. finds an attack significantly faster than brute force, a higher work factor will still help but might not be enough. And you can only go so high before performance suffers.
In the case of password hashing we're concerned with preimage resistance.
MD5 is weak because its not only fast to compute but the risk for collisions is high. If you MD5 the same text multiple times, you can predict the pattern, which is the reason MD5 hashing a string multiple times isn't a solution. Md5 is a classic pigeon hole algorithm.
Bob
Bob
@Ramhound Hm? I've not heard of that tbh.
What?
Bob
Bob
The collision vuln is primarily significant for signatures, e.g. in certificates.
True
Bob
Bob
05:24
Never heard of it affecting more hash rounds.
Specifically, it's significant for signatures where the attacker controls both the legitimate and malicious signed object.
I am pretty sure that thats the case.
Bob
Bob
Maybe. I just haven't heard of that.
Nevermind, must be thinking of soemthing else
Tried hashing a string 15 times each output was different
But it would still be predicitctabe.
Hmm. We cannot say HP is not guilty of unkeyed cartridges as the 564 cartridge set is not keyed.
> The cartridges in these printers are not physically keyed, so it is possible to install them in the wrong slots.
At least this isn't an issue with newer designs, though.
Unkeyed ink cartridges are a big pet peeve for me because it means you can contaminate the ink system with the wrong type of ink.
Even if the printer detects the condition and draws no ink from the incorrectly-installed cartridges, there will likely be ink where the ink cartridges mate to the ink tubes and/or printhead.
This means the ink system will be contaminated with the wrong type of ink.
I should not be able to run the wrong type of ink through the system!
yeah, we read that an hour ago...
05:39
I'm honestly very disappointed that I was able to do this.
and shrug
I'd just read the manual and try not to mess up
It's clearly indicated where the cartridges are inserted, but someone with poor eyesight, colorblindness, or other disability could wind up putting a cartridge into the wrong slot and mess up the printer.
This is not okay.
someone with enough color blindness , it really wouldnt matter that much would it :-) I have never found myself inserting cartriges in the incorrect locations
I was thinking about how someone with a motor-related disability could wind up incorrectly installing cartridges.
large percentages of the time, persons have to replace all color carts at once anyways, so we could go back 20 years and have the whole color group go in at once as a single item.
It is much like replacing batteries in smoke alarms, you either replace them all, or you replace them over and over again, as the next one fails.
05:45
@bwDraco you're unlikely to remove all the ink carts and replace them at once
@Psycogeek Well, you will use the colors at different rates. With time and with multiple sets of cartridges, one color will be noticeably more depleted than the others.
So, I doubt its a huge deal.
Unless you mess up the initial ink install
@kerbalspacebecky imgur.com/gallery/2vN59 cat gifs.
All of the office printers I've personally owned have separate CMYK cartridges.
@bwDraco me, my desktop is all color coded right? guess what, so to are my documents :-) I tend towards having different backgrounds for different prints, so i can identify where they or who they belong to. And also to balance out (some) the depletion of the ink groups .
Bob
Bob
...welp
@kerbalspacebecky Ended up buying an S7 Edge.
05:52
Single tri-color cartridges may be easier to work with but this can actually increase cost per page with certain printing patterns. A business environment that prints lots of documents with the same color logo or other color content will wind up wasting lots of ink in a tri-color cartridge.
once you start Re-filling, it is very low likely your going to deal with (piddling) with that trash 6 times over.
Bob
Bob
$1,249. With $150 cash back. And I can claim any price drops from the 1249 amount within 6 months.
Not unreasonable to expect it to drop by another $100-$250... hm.
That puts it cheaper than grey imports :P
Still the most expensive phone I've ever purchased.
@Bob so you tried to save $100-200 bucks when buying a crappy laptop like mobile item, then thrust a cool grand into a phone :-)
Bob
Bob
@Psycogeek Nah, my daily use laptop was some $2k :\
The little gadgets and stuff are more for fun/to see what I can do with them.
Headphones is one place where I got entirely too much cheap crap though.
that would doubble my budget, still being on the LG G-pro at only $350new or $250 used. Isnt it true that your LG is a backlite , and the samsung is instead led array (amoled or varients) ? It would be Very interesting to see how they compare when trying to view in full sun situations, as the S6 and S7 videos showed them at least visable outdoors this time.
Bob
Bob
05:59
@Psycogeek Yea. My G4 is LCD. Samsung's been all AMOLED for a while.
I find my G4 much better than my S4 in the sun, but it is two generations newer :P
Current AMOLED is supposed to be good.
Hopefully not too much burn-in this time.
The biggest problem with my G4 is it's pretty uncertain... no idea how long it'll last at this point.
Mine has a manufacture date possibly after they fixed the VRMs causing bootloops, but the hardware revision is before :\
Huh. Ready for pickup.
...that was fast.
bootloops? in $500+ phone items, i wouldnt put up with that in a $3 box of cerial , FruitLoops :-)
Bob
Bob
lol
@Psycogeek It actually cost 480 AUD at the time :P
New one could be had for 370 AUD now
So... I could buy three for the price of the S7
@Bob or even cheaper when they find out it is a flawed model. Lemon bootloops
Bob
Bob
But there'd be no way to root with Marshmallow.
@Psycogeek Oh they fixed it Sept last year
so will you sell the G4 then? or have it become a backup you never use and eventually fall out of the Loop :-)
Bob
Bob
06:13
@Psycogeek Not sure yet...
One more wonder, does the samsung allow for any sort of loose microSD chip addition?
Bob
Bob
@Psycogeek ?
SD card? Yea, S7 does.
great
Bob
Bob
14
Q: Buckling spring keyboard in open workspace

int21hI have an IBM model M keyboard and I would like to use it at work. I work in an open workspace setting. Do you guys consider it bad etiquette to use one of these at work? Personally I wouldn't mind it if someone next to me used one. Does anyone here use a clicky clacky keyboard at their work?...

@JourneymanGeek ^
@Bob I would never be the first person in an office to use a clicky keyboard ;p
Bob
Bob
06:19
I'd actually offer to sell the G4 cheap to someone here, but there's really too high of a chance of it outright dying :\
my phone present is a miracle, does everything with zero issues, backlite (preserved meticulously) is just as bright, it has everything in it, including 50% stuff i dont use, and Mostly thanks to Highway robbery data packages, doesn't use web cept when i say it does.
Runs for 96 hours :-O then says it has 85% battery left , even though it doesnt.
the biggest problem with the phone present is the Spammers, in eventual they completly quit giving a crap that it was illegal to robocall or even sales call a cell phone. Without prior permissions.
Bob
Bob
@Psycogeek LG has a thing for that...
I can leave it on standby overnight and it'll go from 100% to 99%
the percentage is using Only the battery voltage to say how full. I thought that was "caused" because of the ZeroLemon extended battery, but it could be the way it works normal.
Does not bother me being battery geek, i have (actually) a better idea of where it stands.
Bob
Bob
lol
I've never actually tested mine.
06:58
Come to think. . I do have one issue, the Speech to text, while mostly worthless feature , without web connect. some cross update of the Google packages cause it to fail miserably. Without web connect, the phone itself saved about 1/2 typing, and like zero time when having to correcting everything, with web connect the speech is sent out to interpret and comes back much better analised.
Some day i Need to Update "all" the google packages which go together , and would update that engine without breaking it.
There is "workaround" for the failure, just shut it off! Phhht. If instead i knew all the dependencies , I could selectivly update the google mess , and get the speech 2 text back without the fails.
07:28
android SE says The "google keyboard" is seperate now (I use LG keyboard). & The "google app" which is all the search junk that i do not use, can effect the presence of the Microphone in the keyboard. There must be more to it than that.
at android SE they got so many Variations, and tons of problems :-) I do not even see this particular one.
Bob
Bob
@Psycogeek I didn't even know it worked offline
Seems many others did not either, and it probably varies with the phones original setups and all.
Must clarify that i am referring to the keyboard MIC thing where you can use speech to type documents and notepads, and SMS, not the "search" and cortina like stuff.
Bob
Bob
I use Swype. Comes with Dragon but I think that's only online
07:45
@Bob well that helps, because they were just saying , that google app is not required for swype, Dragon (great stuff) is often very cpu needy too .
I wonder if it , or this google app thing which may have been what caused Error, has some google "store" dependancy somehow? I think i had to give the google store update the kibash because of evil doings :-) of some other sort.
English only, most certannly some of the Offline possibilities are language limited.
08:16
swype users thrilled with the keyboard, disgusted with the voice recognition, and autocorrect routines and bugs and slowdowns.
08:32
word prediction, has never done anything for me either. If i already have 80% of the word typed, it is already done at that point. Word prediction also does not take into account incorrect placement of letters , which would make the huge list of possible words it thinks your trying to type even longer .
Bob
Bob
> Your device uses a non-harmonised frequency and is intended for use in all European countries. The WLAN can be operated in the EU without restriction indoors, but cannot be operated outdoors.
@kerbalspacebecky This doesn't have the 5 min thing -_-
LOL
> To remove the battery, you must visit an authorised service centre with the provided instructions.
> For your safety, you must not attempt to remove the battery.
... gives 4 very specific disassembly/battery-removal instructions just under.
That is where the Sledge hammer test become important :-)
morning
think i might have won the easer egg hunt
i've got 3 before i'd taken my coat off
08:53
0_0
apparently i'm only allowed one :(
and my boss has banned me from looking for more
@bob techcrunch.com/2016/03/23/… A rollling pebble gathers no moss. Pebble lays off 25% of workforce.
@Burgi your egghunting talents are underappreciated
Either that or they no longer appretiate him raiding the employee refrigerator. :-)
Bob
Bob
@Psycogeek Yea, saw that
08:59
0
Q: How to add latency to TCP packets?

user1933466I have tried netem and wanem neither seem to be affecting the TCP packets. How can I add latency to TCP packets?

Get AOL as your ISP? link in 10 more switches to get to your network? Try Steam game servers, they are (claimed to be) loaded with latency?
Bob
Bob
09:24
wtf is samsung milk
"Samsung's Milk Music service is a freemium-style music app that's exclusive to Samsung devices, and in many cases is pre-loaded on phones and tablets"
"We want to rock your world but you've traveled away from ours.
Samsung Milk Music is only available in the United States.
Stay tuned!"
After paying full price for things, one would expect them to not have all the built in pimps, pushing thier high priced whores off :-)
back when people "accepted" this form of business model, because it would keep the prices down. NOT, it didnt keep prices down at all, and only encoruaged them to continue this practice , even if the reality is it may cost them much hours and labor to include such festivities.
so now a dedicated labor force with feathers in thier hats, is out there rounding up diseased trash to put into your system, instead of discovering the STDs that already are there.
The modern phone and all the spammers that call on it are the genital warts of progress :-)
@Bob 5 min thing?
@Bob yes, apparently you're supposed to provide the instructions to the service center -_-
Bob
Bob
09:42
@kerbalspacebecky Make a local call for 5 mins
Mine just has that seal sticker
Root went well :)
Bob
Bob
09:55
4 fingerprints max? But I have 10 fingers... I think :(
@kerbalspacebecky You were right. It's slippery.
i think this is a dupe but i can't find the question i originally saw....
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Q: Set monitor "boundaries" on OSX?

Ariel WeinbergerI have a Dell 23" monitor. It got damaged and now approximately 7 centimeters from the right is completely black - all the way vertically (I guess pixels got burned or something), and I cannot use that area of the screen. Is there any way to "resize" the amount of screen used by the operating sy...


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