Lithium batteries can ignite, but they don’t just explode like that.
These pagers don’t use lithium battery.
I meant safer in terms of the device doing what you expect it to be doing
Absolutely, I’m just putting some nuance into it for people who don’t know anything about pagers.
Also, pagers that support encryption are absolutely a thing.
Fair, but it appears these were Apollo Gold A25, an off the shelf FLEX system.
Traditionally pagers use either FLEX or POCSAG protocols, both of which are fully unencrypted and have to broadcast everywhere with relatively high power… So safer is maybe a bit of a misnomer… But they also don’t transmit anything so in terms of remote listening and location tracking, yes they are safer.
I wear a Cadet/Radar cap most of times I’m out. I have a flat cap I wear sometimes.
He means his bank’s account when Harper bailed them out during the 2008 housing crash
Sir or Madame, this is a Wendy’s. You’re in the Linux com here.
we still don’t have voting reform
If only there was somebody who campaigned on this promise!
That’s using the externally developed Cyberus Technology backend though, like I mentioned. As mentioned all over this thread using extensions is rife for license abuse issues.
Yeah virtualization and containers are very different things. That said virt-manager can be used with LXC as well :)
Create the bridge with Network Manager advanced config, voilà!
I think it should work with some version of the Q35 chipset, if not PC
should work. But Wine might be a better option if you just want to run some old version of office (or frankly just use LibreOffice)
Bridge networking should be as simple as selecting “bridge” in the network interface setting and putting the name of your bridge interface… You can create a bridge interface with Network-Manager. Or use macvtap.
That’s all available in Qemu/OVMF yeah.
No, VBox does not use KVM unless you use some off brand backend, which is an extra layer of complexity and software you must install and manage.
Absolutely everything you might want to do with VBoxManager is going to be available via virsh and the multiple libviet utilities.
I’ve never had a reason to look elsewhere.
Not using Type 2 hypervisor would be a good one. Not being beholden to Oracle’s shitry licensing schemes is certainly another.
Certainly using a slightly dated Gtk is still more user friendly and better integrated than the god aweful stuff Oracle puts up. What UX improvements are you looking for?
Why would these not work in KVM exactly?
My point is that the lithium battery angle is a diversion and isn’t even relevant.