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FrankPetrilli commented on Setting up a home VPN server with WireGuard (2019)   mikkel.hoegh.org/2019/11/... · Posted by u/kayaroberts
SyrupThinker · 6 months ago
The amount of people here just exposing their network to Tailscale, and recommending others to do the same, is surprising, to say the least.

I've set up Wireguard on a VPS once six years ago, and nothing needed adjustment since. It is as easy as you make it out to be, and depending on the use case the firewall rules can also be simple.

If I need to add a new device, which is probably a rarity for the average user, and once a year for me, it takes two minutes to edit two files and restart a service.

I can see reasons why one would want to use Tailscale, especially in an organization. But just uncritically recommending it for home-lab like setups seems as harmful as pushing people to Cloudflare for everything.

FrankPetrilli · 6 months ago
Inter-node mesh with raw Wireguard is an exercise in patience to say the least; I have a few different colo sites, my house, my phone, LTE/5G hotspots, raspberry pi projects in the field, etc that I want to fully connect together.

Raw Wireguard is fine for a road warrior or site-to-site VPN setup as is common, but when you want multipoint peer-to-peer connections without routing through what might be a geographically distant point, magic DNS, etc, Tailscale really shines through.

If you're paranoid, enable https://tailscale.com/kb/1226/tailnet-lock or run https://headscale.net/ on your own as a control server.

FrankPetrilli commented on Ask HN: GCP Outage?    · Posted by u/grilledchickenw
remram · 8 months ago
Whole-zone outages are also rare...
FrankPetrilli · 8 months ago
"Rarity" is a distinction without merit in this particular case; the important thing to note is that (most) clouds don't guarantee _any_ availability of a single zone. A system which stashes all of its infrastructure in one zone only is expected to be impacted by issues with that cloud, while a multi-zone setup spanning a region is generally "soft-guaranteed" to be resilient to normal operations / failures.
FrankPetrilli commented on Using Home Assistant, adguard home and an $8 smart outlet to avoid brain rot   romanklasen.com/blog/beat... · Posted by u/remuskaos
FrankPetrilli · 9 months ago
Seeing this, I had the initial idea of using AdGuard logs to trigger a power-down of your device if you try and visit brainrot content. I think I like it that way more.
FrankPetrilli commented on What do wealthy people buy, that ordinary people know nothing about? (2015)   old.reddit.com/r/AskReddi... · Posted by u/Tomte
fakedang · 10 months ago
https://franksboots.com/

Are you these guys? One techbro recommended these to me and my cofounder and I've never looked back. Your boots are going places, literally!

Edit:- Changed link to direct.

FrankPetrilli · 10 months ago
Yes, that's my family's business, I'm glad to hear you've had such great experiences. Similar to you, I've never looked back; every time I put on trail shoes I yearn for my boots again.
FrankPetrilli commented on What do wealthy people buy, that ordinary people know nothing about? (2015)   old.reddit.com/r/AskReddi... · Posted by u/Tomte
ape4 · 10 months ago
Probably $200 for a good pair of boots
FrankPetrilli · 10 months ago
$200 is enough to get you a pair of Keen boots, which will last a year or two. Truly "good" in the boot world is hand welted hand made leather boots, which are a rarity these days. There are functionally only a few bootmakers that still manufacture this way these days, and about half of them are all in the same Washington State region :)

Expect ~$400, and it's easy to spend $600 without much effort.

That said, look at my comment above in this thread; they do really last 10 years or more, so the investment is well worth it.

FrankPetrilli commented on What do wealthy people buy, that ordinary people know nothing about? (2015)   old.reddit.com/r/AskReddi... · Posted by u/Tomte
ackbar03 · 10 months ago
I'm curious about this though, does a rich man actually wear the same pair of boots for 10 years?

That being said, I've noticed that a lot of clothes that I bought 10 years ago or so are of pretty high quality compared to today, (and no, they are not rich man's clothes). Some of them I actually have been wearing for more than 10 years now.

FrankPetrilli · 10 months ago
Oh hey I'm uniquely positioned to answer this; though I'm in tech (and at this point frankly speaking well-compensated) my family have been bootmakers for decades.

I'm sitting at a tech office right now wearing a pair of boots that my father made for me in 2015 - regardless, they're absolutely spotless and I'd wear them to a formal event without hesitation. Every 6 months or so when I'm by his store I shine them up and put in a fresh pair of leather laces. Every 3 or so years, he re-soles them when the soles eventually wear out and lose traction. Eventually they'll require a rebuild, but they've got probably another 5-10 years of daily wear in them before that. I've got a few more pairs I swap between every so often, like a pair with OD green canvas that looks nice with khakis, but these solid black ones are my daily wear.

While 10 years sounds like a good run for boots, my father has a pair at ~35 years old now that he still wears frequently. IIRC they've been through one or two rebuilds and few re-soles in that time.

Were these commodity sneakers, I'd be purchasing a new pair every few months. Even nice running or trail shoes only tend to last a few hundred miles in my experience, but I've put tens of thousands on these and will get ten thousand more easily. Re-soles and rebuilds aren't free, but they're less than a replacement and put years of lifetime back on the boot. They're also comfortable as hell and fit me like a glove.

So in short: yeah, rich men do wear the same pair of boots for 10 years, or even far longer.

FrankPetrilli commented on Alternative clouds are booming as companies seek cheaper access to GPUs   techcrunch.com/2024/05/05... · Posted by u/belter
Workaccount2 · 2 years ago
Google doesn't use nVidia chips, at least for AI. They have their own in house solution.
FrankPetrilli commented on Broadcasting LoRa packets wihout a radio [video]   youtube.com/watch?v=eIdHB... · Posted by u/koutsie
ranger_danger · 2 years ago
100km @ 100mW is not impressive when it's attached to a 30dBi antenna...
FrankPetrilli · 2 years ago
It wasn't a 30dBi antenna for the control link, but a light moxon with 5.98dBi according to its datasheet. Standard 5.8GHz analog video, on the other hand, did require a ton of gain.
FrankPetrilli commented on Broadcasting LoRa packets wihout a radio [video]   youtube.com/watch?v=eIdHB... · Posted by u/koutsie
topspin · 2 years ago
Doesn't LoRa have a pretty constrained duty cycle? I read the regs on LoRa (for the US at least) and found that you're required to limit transmission frequency to 1% (36s/h). I'm guessing you'd have to go well past that to operate an RC aircraft in the conventional manner. If you're just commanding waypoints I suppose you could be compliant.
FrankPetrilli · 2 years ago
LoRa is just a protocol, there are no rules inherent to the protocol itself. Certain LoRaWAN networks have rules around how often you can send messages through them, but RC links don't use LoRaWAN.
FrankPetrilli commented on Broadcasting LoRa packets wihout a radio [video]   youtube.com/watch?v=eIdHB... · Posted by u/koutsie
jorvi · 2 years ago
Were the naysayers saying 2.4GHz was impossible at all, or were they saying in a normal setting?

The distinction is quite important because I imagine anything bigger than the tiniest of villages will be swamped with interference..

FrankPetrilli · 2 years ago
In particular, people used to plain FSK RC protocols like Spektrum DSM, FrSky D8, Futaba FASST, and similar which tend to failsafe around <1km even with 100mW of power believed that a 2.4GHz link could never do 100km regardless of interference or noise issues.

Also notably, LoRa does tremendously well with real-world noise and interference. Of course any receiver is susceptible to frontend overload, but in "normal" situations I never worry about flying 2.4GHz even in crowded cities, and have never had a failsafe even in some ridiculous situations. As someone above mentions, LTE on the 800MHz band with 900MHz control links are much more of a problem - I've had a failsafe for that exact reason at <200m total distance from takeoff.

u/FrankPetrilli

KarmaCake day59February 9, 2018View Original