Hmph. Where's Waldo? got a lot easier with modern tech it seems.
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I know that actual talkback channels on gigs are just there for the taking, a friend posted some very funny recordings of various gigs's talkback banter a few years ago
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I wonder how often on live DJ gigs is there a talkback style RF channel open with what is going out to the monitors/amps, and how plausible it is to bring a not-bomb-looking phone+SDR setup to dump it during a gig.
In unrelated news, I can't wait for a more clean version of whatever this ID to come out
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Well, I guess "fuck me" for trying the greener option I guess
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From the perspective of Equinix this must be one of the most expensive dresses ever made. Because if you consider the monthly revenue of all of the individual single mode patches here, It's got to be at least 100k USD/m in Equinix pricing
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Equinix providing rare photos of the final boss level of the CoreSite LA1 One Wilshire meet me room
https://blog.equinix.com/blog/2025/01/31/unveiling-the-hidden-material-that-weaves-together-our-digital-lives/
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It's worth keeping in mind that this final number also extremely depends on the 0.007J per SSH connection number, any real change to that (I think 0.007J is on the low side) will radically change the final KwH for the worse
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My best guess is on a reasonably loaded Intel SP1 system, a SSH connection setup takes 0.007 Joules of power.
A random machine I picked out has 15200 SSH connection setups a day
And that is only assuming one party , so likely 2x, so all of the SSH bruteforces going around is costing around 38kW of power.
on one hand, not that bad (there are some DCs that can put that into a single rack), on the other hand, that's quite a lot of wasted CPU energy
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I wonder what the overall global power consumption is caused by SSH brute force attempts.
I guess I need need to figure out how many joules a SSH connection setup costs on a average system ...
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Heh, I've reached the bgp.he.net top {N} IX Participation list with the bgp.tools route collector!
There are a good 20~ other IXs still in progress (some slower than others)
This also reminds me that I should probably figure out porting AS212232 away from my name and to the actual bgp.tools legal entity
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Dear valued customer,
Here is how your supplier legal onboarding email found me
Regards
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I feel like I am rapidly approaching the LD50 of supplier security/legal onboarding surveys this month
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MEMS devices purely exist for that scanning election microscope that speaks to the "scary alien tech" vibe that everyone fears.
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A TV tuner attached to one of my NAS's seems to be a bit "🥴" after a nearby lightning strike. I assume it has semiconductor tinnitus
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Love getting this stuff over SSH:
kernel:[791344.547831] Internal error: Oops: 96000004 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
Message from syslogd@ordat at Jan 27 17:15:00 ...
kernel:[791344.569675] Code: f90013f5 f9418014 f9404e95 d503201f (f94016a0) It's like seeing the smoke outside of the firework factory just before it explodes
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Really quite considerate for the severe weather to respect the border of Northern Ireland
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If I was going to take a guess (and this is hearsay)
I would assume that that "peering management issues" are probably a euphemism for the similar problems that Cogent have with NTT, and that is that and NTT does not want to peer with the "low cost carriers" in Asia.
Cogent has previously written about their (ongoing) issues with NTT:
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Yeah seems I was right, from a 1299/Arelion ticket:
We are still connected to NTT in North America, and we're hoping that they will soon revisit their decision. We are awaiting a response from them we hope to hear from them soon.I guess that confirms it. NTT-Arelion have depeered in the EU, traffic between the two will divert around the US for now until they solve their "peering management" issues.
This brings NTT up to two peering disputes, NTT-Cogent and NTT-Arelion are de-peered in the EU as of now.
I also just checked and it seems that Arelion-TATA has been resolved, as they seem peered in the EU once more.
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Hmmm, did NTT As2914 and Arelion AS1299 depeer in EU? Seemingly everything in the EU between them right now goes via the East Coast USA...
(see examples of London-London going via the US, but seemingly this is also happens FRA-FRA)
Unsure if this is a maintenance, since surely the whole of the EU would not go at once?
Maybe just a misconfig or interesting localpref? Surely that would not happen on both ends though...
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This post has been brought to you by: Me learning what a rados bucket resharding was when my 37 Million file bucket suddenly decided to do it, blocking writes on that bucket for seemingly 1:30 hours
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