Yes, but why would you want to? We have enough addresses for the foreseeable future.
reject humanity, become toaster | she/they | experimenting with names
Yes, but why would you want to? We have enough addresses for the foreseeable future.
AFAIK, they only offer the opt-out form in the EU and UK
You can use a DNS challenge to show you are in control of the domain without having anything exposed to the net. Essentially LE gives you a special value you have to add as a TXT DNS entry. LE will check if this record exists for your domain, and gives you a certificate, no public IP involved. This even allows you to create wildcard certificates.
Reverse Polish Notation works almost like you describe. You put the operands first, then the operation. For example:
Probably the reason why we are not using it is because most tools today use algebraic notation, and it would be a lot of effort to switch
each commit points to the one before. additionally a commit stores which lines in which files changed compared to the previous commit. a branch points to a particular commit.
it’s just linked lists of commits (except when merging)
Did you set the modem to bridge mode/DMZ, or alternatively set it to port forward to the router. The router should then port forward to the server.
Are you sure the IP address in duckdns is correct? Do you have a static or dynamic public IP, and if dynamic, how are you updating it?
no love for godot?
Except here, it’s just summer all around the clock
It was initially presented as the all-problem-solver, mainly by the media. And tbf, it was decently competent in certain fields.
fundamentally, an llm doesn’t “use” individual sources for any answer. it is just a function approximator, and as such every datapoint influences the result, just more if it closely aligns with the input.