That could - by no means a guarantee - result in vote splitting and worse outcomes.
CompactFlax
I think I’m being overly charitable, but there are some really awful products available if you don’t spend some time looking before buying.
It’s similar to Putin waxing poetic about Ukraine, to a degree.
“We’re so mad that you manufacture things cheaper than us, that we’re gonna make it so we pay more for those things.”
America doesn’t have aluminum manufacturing capacity. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/aluminum-kitimat-quebec-tariffs-jobs-1.7472032
Maybe sometime cars will be equipped with some sort of satellite based navigation system. I imagine such a thing could provide time - might even rely on it, in fact. Combine that with a database and the user might never have to change the time in the car!
So frustrating.
Yes, neonicotonoids probably kill bees.
But if we want to be taken seriously, we need to be knowledgeable about the subject. Neonicotonoids are a class of insecticides. Roundup is a herbicide (glyphosate). They can both be bad, but they are bad in different ways.
Well yes, it is one hop, because you’ve got the router doing TLS termination. Inside your network you point to the server that has the TLS certs. Outside of the network you do port forwarding, or use a tunnel with cloudflare agents.
Why is the router involved at all? It’s all local traffic. The external traffic comes through the cloud flare tunnel, right? Maybe I’m not understanding the architecture you’ve got.
It’s possible but it’s an extra pain in the butt.
Internally, have you tried pointing the DNS directly to the ngnix server, not the router? There’s no reason to have that extra hop (I don’t think).
If you are establishing a TLS connection to a server, the server will need a certificate. It sounds like you’re trying to have two instances of a reverse proxy - one on the server, and one on the router. It may be my ignorance of the particulars, but my immediate thought is that you should select one point in the network to do reverse proxying.
The amplifi line is the plug and play line closest to the google/eero/etc. experience. It is specifically the one I was referring to which has less than enthusiastic feedback.
I neglected to mention Mikrotik. They’re a Latvian company that is also in the space. I think they’d be farther to the professional/complex end of the spectrum. Omada is in the middle, and Ubiquiti leans toward the easier to use side. They’re all going to need more work than google wifi, unfortunately.
The “other” site has a wealth of information; evanmccann.net is a good source for demystifying their product line as well.
Yes, we know that the far right in Europe is supported by Pooty. This doesn’t represent a breakdown in unity.