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neidu2 ,

I'm by no means an authority on this subject. At best I'm an enthusiastic amateur, so take my answer with a bucket of salt.

The static on the radio comes from the redshifted heat of the universe expanding. Even if all energy in the universe has evened out, the expansion is still going on, creating the redshifted heat.

However, so much time will have passed that the distances involved will cause this redshift to be even greater. At some point this static will be on a spectrum too low for a radio to pick up.

Also, even if you were able to tune your radio low enough, as the static is now created outside of the observable universe, there's no new noise that can reach you.

Ergo, silence

neidu2 , (edited )

This hotel I usually stay at when I'm visiting Houston has waffle irons in the rooms that make waffles in the shape of Texas

neidu2 , (edited )

"Consultant", of course. Anyone with an ounce of a real career wouldn't want their manager seeing them post BS like this. This reads like a desperate attempt at saying something profound, hoping to attract (easily fooled) clients.

nrk9819 , to Random
@nrk9819@mastodon.social avatar

Everytime I want to love @firefox , I realize that it doesn't support View Transitions API 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

neidu2 ,

Plus, ATCs hate angels who keep cluttering the FIR for no apparent reason. They’re not transponder equipped either.

neidu2 ,

I’m not that picky in terms of eouters, as long as it is rack mounted. I happen to use a Fortigate 101E that was no longer needed at work.

While it does support VLAN, I don’t do that on the router, as Fortigate can be a bit of a pain in the ass when it comes to VLAN tagging. I instead have dedicated ports for the various network I serve, each of which connect to the same switch.

On this switch I have each of those uplink tagged as access ports for the VLANs they represent. Then the remaining ports can be tagged as I please. A few extra patch cables, but only dealing with VLAN tags on aruba makes it so much better.

As for PoE, that’s best done on a switch. My Aruba powers all of my access points this way.

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