I just checked, and I have connectivity while on cellular. Maybe (just wild speculation) your mobile network is IPv6-only? Android (not Linux) should list 192.0.0.4 as an IP address in that case.
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Yes, Linux is running in a VM, and the network interface is a virtualized veth interface connected to a host bridge. The host android system has IP address 192.168.0.1, and this network interface is called avf_tap_fixed (as seen from termux).
While this is very exciting, I just tried it, and the network connectivity seems to be broken. No IPv6.
shadowtofu@discuss.tchncs.deto Technology@lemmy.world•Ten reasons to avoid Amazon | Ethical ConsumerEnglish101·4 months agoBuilding nuclear power plants is not a science problem, though, it’s an engineering problem. Just because we can harness energy by breaking up nuclear bonds does not mean that we can do so economically, given the constraints under which we have to operate power plants.
And OP never disputed the science anyways?
shadowtofu@discuss.tchncs.deto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Anyone else here self-hosting on absolutely shit hardware?English2·6 months agoI met someone that was throwing out old memory modules. Literally boxes full of DDR, DDR2 modules. I got quite excited, hoping to upgrade my server’s memory. Yeah, DDR2 only goes up to 2GiB. So I am stuck with 2×2GiB. But I am only using 85% of that anyways, so it’s fine.
My review does not have a breakdown by platform.
shadowtofu@discuss.tchncs.deto Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Steam Survey Results For November 2024: Linux Gaming Marketshare Slightly HigherEnglish10·7 months agoYou can install steam on Fedora using an RPM repository. But everyone using the Steam Flatpak will show up as Freedesktop SDK, no matter the distribution. For Fedora-based gaming distributions such as Bazzite, this is the default way to use Steam.
shadowtofu@discuss.tchncs.deto Technology@lemmy.world•Youtube has fully blocked InvidiousEnglish15·9 months agoTOR exit node IP addresses are well-known. If YouTube wants to, they can just block the TOR network.
shadowtofu@discuss.tchncs.deto Technology@lemmy.world•NASA's solar sail successfully spreads its wings in spaceEnglish19·10 months agoYou can check heavens above (adjust your location) to check when it will be visible for you.
Wait a second, it’s going to pass over my house in 5 minutes!
Edit: Shit, clouds!
Edit2: I was able to see it through a few gaps in the cloud cover!
shadowtofu@discuss.tchncs.deto Programming@programming.dev•20 new CSS viewport unitsEnglish8·11 months agoThe link is broken, because it is attempting to create a new archive.org snapshot whenever someone clicks on it.
shadowtofu@discuss.tchncs.deto [Dormant] moved to !space@mander.xyz@lemmy.world•SpaceX’s Starship rocket completes test flight for the first time, successfully splashes down4·1 year agoI just compared the footage from various points in time. The flap positions for T+00:48:12 (pre-entry) and T+01:05:41 are almost the same, then it rotates about its rotation axis until T+01:05:44, but suddenly it starts to rotate about ANOTHER axis, and at T+01:05:47, its at a completely new angle. I think T+01:05:44 is the point where the flap finally breaks (after touchdown, but before splashdown).
I think we have seen motion as fast as the one at T+01:04:22, but the subsequent bounce is surprisingly strong. I still think that the flap was still under some control at that point.
I heard rumors on reddit that SpaceX deliberately removed a single tile on this flap for testing purposes, but I could not find any reliable confirmation for this. They deliberately removed tiles on the engine skirt, though.
shadowtofu@discuss.tchncs.deto [Dormant] moved to !space@mander.xyz@lemmy.world•SpaceX’s Starship rocket completes test flight for the first time, successfully splashes downEnglish8·1 year agoI expect the flap on the opposite side of the ship experienced a similar level of destruction. Well, that depends on whether the damage occurred because of a general loss of structural integrity because of excessive heating, or if specific localized damage on that flap allowed plasma to penetrate the heat shield, resulting in the damage that we observed. So, general structural failure vs. random damage at that location cascading into a hole in the flap.
Anyways, I am pretty sure that the complete loss of control authority on one of the flaps would be catastrophic. But the movement that we observed seemed pretty deliberate and consistent to what we saw during the suborbital test flights. Especially the unfolding of the flap at the T+01:05:42 mark is EXACTLY what we saw during the high-altitude flights, e.g., see SN8 @ T+6:33 or SN9 @ T+6:18. The forward flaps are folded back at first, and then rotate into a position perpendicular to the surface of Starship. The movement (for IFT-4) is precise, consistent with previous flights, and stops abruptly in the correct position.
It’s more than 12 years