Love it. I’d never have thought to look for it, but I’m glad I stumbled across this post!
Love it. I’d never have thought to look for it, but I’m glad I stumbled across this post!
Storage of easily enriched material to prevent theft is a concern, especially given the number of incidents with jokers photographing themselves inside nuclear facilities and the results of FBI testing of nuclear site security protocols.
Additionally, given the ridiculously long half life of the products, you get into conversations about what happens on the thousands of years time scale in which it’s not reasonable to think that any given state remains politically stable.
And we’re just ignoring the whole weapons proliferation side of things?
Edit: misunderstood what OP wanted to do, leaving this here in case it’s interesting to anyone.
Sounds like what you are tyring to do is called Split Horizon DNS.
Requests from outside your network should resolve server.domain.com to the public IP, but requests from inside your network should resolve it to the private IP.
If that’s what it is then you register the public IP with your nameservers. You also run a DNS service internally which you point all your computers at (likely by putting it as the DNS server in your networks DHCP settings). That DNS server is set up to return the private ip addresses for all your servers, and to forward any other requests to some external DNS like 1.1.1.1
I’m not sure what your use case or for needing to use the internal IP address from inside the network, but it might be to avoid traffic exiting your network just to be sent back in? Or you me a that you want external requests to go to one server and internal to go to another server? I’m which case the set up above still works, but on just use the appropriate IP addresses in the appropriate places.
An effect can be observable but still negligible in terms of the actual increase of risk.
You think a mercury sandwich isn’t a realistic representation of wood.
Wow, you know, after careful consideration I think you may be right. Thanks for your wisdom. Truly enlightening.
I’ll go eat some wood.
If something is part edible and part not, then it really depends on the nature of that not edible bit. If it’s inert, then great. If it’s not, then you could be kinda fucked.
The fact that something is 45% edible says precisely nothing about whether or not it is edible.
Wood is just less than half cellulose by weight, so wood must be safe to easy.
This mercury sandwich is just less than half bread by weight, so it must be safe to eat.
The answer used to be John the Ripper, but I’m a decade out of date on this stuff, so it might not be any more.
/c/mildlyinteresting
Seriously. All this talk of automatically updating versions has my head spinning!
This may be a silly question, unless is isn’t. Are you sure that your maximum upload speed is 300Mbps? Your maximum upload speed can be different to your maximum download speed. https://speedof.me can help you check.
If that’s not the answer, sorry for possibly being overly simple, but some people might not realise.
Here’s some basic nutrition information from the world health organisation: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/healthy-diet
And here’s anther form the USDA https://www.myplate.gov/life-stages/adults
Jamie Oliver’s cookbooks are nice and simple. 30 Minute Meals is worth a look. His cooking shoes are pretty informative and not too complex. He’ll give tips like “don’t cook the chicken on too hard gh a heat or it will go tough” or whatever.
Also, here are his “quick meals” recipes on his website https://www.jamieoliver.com/recipes/category/course/quick-fixes/
“Chicken breast on a salad” or “Steak / chops / sausages with salad” is a good go to. Learn to make a simple garden salad and a chunk of meat with a sauce or some spices out of a packet. Nandos lemon and herb spices are great.
That’s amazing, I love it. Thanks for linking that!
No comment on the level of PFAS aside from
This is just feeding the outrage machine to get clicks. If it was a story they’d be citing concentration guidelines and telling you what concentrations were found in the products. It’s not a story, it’s rage bait.