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radianttiger.com
| | www.brandonmartinez.com
4.7 parsecs away

Travel
| | I recently upgrade my network stack to a Ubiquiti UniFi-based setup. Overall, it's been an awesome upgrade and I've really enjoyed working with the hardware. However, I was getting bit by a pretty serious bug when it came to my primary desktop machine - a 2018 Mac Mini.
| | denken.io
4.2 parsecs away

Travel
| | Recently, I had to expand an existing small business network with Ubiquiti WiFi components. I've been using the UniFi Dream Machine Pro at home for years and have come to love Ubiquitis products. In a standard setup you connect UDMs WAN port to the existing network and the access points to UDMs LAN ports. In [...]
| | vninja.net
2.5 parsecs away

Travel
| | As I've [covered before](/tags/unifi/), I run my home network mostly on Ubiquiti UniFi hardware. Since this offers a lot of nifty possibilities, I figured I should try to isolate all my "IoT"-devices in a separate network, while still making them accessible. After all, you don't want a security issue on some sensor/automation thing you have in your house to be able to access and encrypt your familiy photos, right? The thing that sits in the corner and controls the color of your lightbulbs, do not need to...
| | jmmv.dev
20.4 parsecs away

Travel
| Suppose you have a nice PowerMac G5 big beast around and want to install a modern operating system on it. Suppose that you want FreeBSD to run on it. Suppose that you would like to use ZFS as much as possible, say to use the machine as a NAS. If all of the above apply to you, you have come to the right place! Read on for how I got FreeBSD 10.0-CURRENT with a ZFS root to work on a PowerMac G5. I am pretty sure the instructions here apply to other PowerPC-based machines as well, although the specific details on how to set up the boot loader most likely differ.