|
You are here |
golb.hplar.ch | ||
| | | | |
blog.yoav.ws
|
|
| | | | | Plain-text HTTP needs to die, but denying new feature support from it does not provide the right incentives. | |
| | | | |
words.filippo.io
|
|
| | | | | (or for any other name) The web is moving to HTTPS, preventing network attackers from observing or injecting page contents. But HTTPS needs TLS certificates, and while deployment is increasingly a solved issue thanks to the ACME protocol and Let's Encrypt, development still mostly ends up happening over HTTP because | |
| | | | |
blog.gripdev.xyz
|
|
| | | | | Code, Apps and Thoughts @lawrencegripper | |
| | | | |
moddedbear.com
|
|
| | | These are mostly notes I made for myself while setting up Pi-hole and Unbound on a new Raspberry Pi, but I figured I may as well post them here in case it helps someone out or gets them wanting to try it out. If you're unaware, Pi-hole is a network-wide ad blocker that works by looking at DNS queries and Unbound is a recursive DNS resolver. There's a few benefits of running both: | ||