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#network

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This is a screen capture of KDE Connect on one of my Androids.

As you can clearly see my LAN has quite an amount of devices. All of these devices are being used by me.
They have specific purposes which makes my Android experience along with my Computing experience versatile and efficient.

I did not know how important KDE connect was for me. When I learned about it, I knew that it doesn't just enrich what I can do

KDE Connect is not a gimmick where I can control a Media Player, without any network connectivity by itself, from any of my KDE Connect devices. Many different functions can be handled smoothly without any problems, with the highest Speed that my wLAN can deliver from the point of my view of the LAN routers I have in my network.

Right now I'm using a wLAN router that is portable. This enables me to have the most efficient data transfer Speed between the devices I have on me without any snooping from any Big Company.

Connected to the WiFi at Work

- kolektiva.social: Accessible!
- kolektiva.media: Blocked!

Once again, the centralized machinery of “FortiGuard Intrusion Prevention” acts as the cyber-police, deciding which spaces of collective communication are permitted and which are suppressed, all in the name of “security.”

The means of digital communication, like the means of production, remain under the control of bureaucratic authorities, not the workers who actually use them.

It’s a reminder that even in the digital realm, access and association are mediated by top-down structures, not by free federation or mutual aid.

But collective action and solidarity, online and off, will always find cracks in the firewall.

Blegh.

I remember being explained to me once before how #IPv6 SLAAC works, but I've since forgotten and I'm too NAT-pilled by IPv4 to be able to grok it on my own.

It also kind of makes my few privacy nerves itch to think that systems in an IPv6 #network just have public IPs by default instead of tucking them away privately behind a gateway with NAT. >.>

But at the same time, having a public IP by default would make spinning up self-hosted servers easy peasy, lemon squeezy.