Why in the world would you have one router connected to other router, like…
Me: Types 192.168.1.1 in the address bar Shows the login page, this is the router that is connected to the other router (and devices connect to it)
Me: Types 192.168.100.1 in the adress bar Shows another login page, this is the router that is connected to the internet
It’s not even an enterprise network or whatever, it’s just a residential network!
I still don’t have access to the… proxy router’s login page to figure out what’s the reason for such a weird setup, more on this on five PM.
Does anyone know of a good platform to self-publish a novel these days?
FreeBSD: performance flavoured BSD
Dragonfly BSD: filesystem flavoured FreeBSD
NetBSD: portability flavoured BSD
OpenBSD: network flavoured NetBSD
GNU/Linux: everything flavoured not BSD
Darwin: copyright flavoured BSD
Windows: security flavoured Problem
Things No One Tells You, But They Should:
All trauma you've repressed through your teens and 20's will come bite your ass in your 30's, you will not escape this reckoning.
What else do you wish someone would have told you?
Since this is unfortunately not common knowledge yet, let’s spread some information. Here is the guide for what to do when someone is having a tonic-clonic seizure, as described by Epilepsy Action:
• Protect them from injury (remove harmful objects from nearby)
• Cushion their head
• Look for an epilepsy identity card or identity jewellery – it may give you information about their seizures and what to do
• Time how long the seizure lasts
• Once the jerking has stopped, help their breathing by gently placing them in the recovery position (see below)
• Stay with the them until they are fully recovered
• Be calm and reassuring
Call for an ambulance if any of these things apply:
• You know it is their first seizure
• The seizure lasts for more than five minutes
• They have one tonic-clonic seizure after another without regaining consciousness between seizures
• They are seriously injured during the seizure
• They have trouble breathing after the seizure has stopped