That's a particularly buried lede
9point6
Ahem, this is a community
What did you expect?
Not everyone?
Does anyone?
Good thing we can fork, I guess, but it's kinda sad to watch a previously good org die
the demise of Perl
You imply this is a bad thing
Which one's in the Linux kernel?
My main use is skipping the blank page problem when writing a new suite of tests—which after about 10 mins of refactoring are often a good starting point
Several times a day
Sometimes I can't be arsed with the replies it might generate, others I realise I'm not actually adding anything to the conversation
If Israel could stop actively trying to start world war 3, that'd be nice.
There's only 4 years between FF7 and Halo
Hmm
I'd maybe try systematically turning any other devices off you think could potentially have the grunt to run windows server in a container or VM.
Do you have a Mac/Linux machine handy? If you run arp -a
in one terminal and ping the unusual IP in another, that should give you a corresponding MAC address for the device. You can then look up the MAC address and see if it gives you any more info about the device running it—it might not but you never know. You can use something like https://dnschecker.org/mac-lookup.php
I guess next you could look at taking that MAC and blocking it in your router control panel and see if anything starts complaining
Yeah IIRC you're right, though I remember you could contact apple and reset it.
It was called FairPlay DRM and they only really got rid of it around a decade after iTunes launched. I'm not 100% but I think I had to pay to upgrade my already paid-for library to DRM free too
~~AFAIK, Wayland explicitly doesn't do this by design~~
~~If you use X you can tunnel it over SSH~~
Completely misread the question
You want to look into the DISPLAY (or maybe WAYLAND_DISPLAY in your situation, I can't remember off the top of my head) environment variable