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Every network engineer must lock themselves out of a node at some point, it is a rite of passage.
I like making music on handheld trackers like LSDJ and Piggy Tracker. I’m into retro gaming, TF2, Linux, FOSS, photography, and motorsports. I primarily follow F1, NASCAR, and Formula E.
Every network engineer must lock themselves out of a node at some point, it is a rite of passage.
Cuba might be a good place to look for a real world example of this. They had the concepts of “SNET” and “el paquete semanal” that were solutions to poor internet penetration, expensive internet costs (pay per MB), and heavy restrictions on that internet.
El paquete semanal is a weekly payload of the latest movies, TV episodes, manga, comics, etc. that gets brought into the country and spread by sneakernet.
SNET is widespread guerilla LAN networking to the point where Cuba had a well populated private WoW server. Also solved some of the Internet cost issues because you could game and share content locally without paying for every little MB.
As of 2020, SNET is now “illegal” and those existing networks are being absorbed into their ISP.
Eh, MP count means very very little in this modern world of computational smartphone photography. My Nokia XR21 (2024) was $400 brand new and has a 50MP sensor but it’s photos are comparable to a 12mp pixel 4 (2019). Processing and optics are everything.
Will probably be a great phone regardless