tux7350

joined 2 years ago
[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 7 points 12 hours ago

Oh oh oh! I've actually done this! I was a TOW gunner that had to try and find 3000 meters of wire from a training range after I was done shooting. It fucking sucked and took hours lmao ain't no fucking way you're doing that AND getting shot at.

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 3 points 13 hours ago

Ooo minimum? Dont recall that exactly but I do remember the mechanism that arms the missile is activated by G force. Missile has to fly for a bit before it arms.

Second part of your question is pretty loaded. Theres tons of unguided systems that have wildly different arming mechanisms.

Really what you care about is stand off distance. Can I hit my enemy with my missile before they can get into range to shoot me?

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 5 points 13 hours ago

People who play War Thunder want to know lol you can actually find cut outs that show the internals online. The TOW has been around for awhile.

But the wires were for X and Y navigation. Theres an IR beacon that flashes out the back of the missile. The camera sees the beacon and when you move the controls the missile will follow. Theres a Russian T90 tank that has a defense system that spoofs the beacon. Looks like headlights, called the Shtora-1 check it out.

Wire was made out of the thinnest, strongest metal I've ever seen. It would cut your boot if you snagged it and pulled, but it could be cut with scissors.

If you lost a wire the missile would go erratic and would lose control depending on which wire was lost. Really depened on what youre trying to shoot over if you broke a wire. Can't shoot over buildings.

My favorite fact though, it flys above the tank! Search YouTube for a slow mo and you'll see what i mean. Explodes from above.

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 6 points 13 hours ago

Naw, that shit was super strong. If you caught your boot and pulled it would slice clean into your boot. But it was fragile enough to be cut with scissors. A little thicker than a strand of hair.

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 5 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago) (1 children)

Already had the back replacement thank you very much lol

Edit: sorry to answer your question. Nope, ill take the missile. A drone coming at you is slow (in relation to a missile) and doesnt have a lot of explosives, other enemies will think they have a chance. You see a missile take someone out, I promise you, that you wont stick around to see it again.

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 18 points 18 hours ago (11 children)

This is not new tech. We have been using wires like this in the battlefield since the 70's. I was a TOW gunner and shot plenty of missiles that have a wire like this drone. Except, ya know it's a missile and it moves significantly faster. TOW stands for Tube launched Opitically Wire guided missile.

Ask away if you wanna know anything about em.

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 5 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Doesn't have too! You can just use nix as a package manager and install it to whatever distro you choose 😉

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 3 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Windsurfing? 🏄‍♀️

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 6 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I have a coworker that likes to pick fun at my usage of CLI tools. He said it's confusing "why would I use a terminal when the GUI was made after?". They vehemently hate anytime they have to work with CLI.

I watched them use an FTP program to download and change one value in a .conf file. Like they downloaded the file, opened it in notepad++, changed one thing, saved it, reuploaded / overretten the original. I tried to show them how to just use nano and got told their way was "better since you could ensure the file was replaced". Its okay, I've secretly caught them using it a couple times lol

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

The rules still apply to the host, just not inside the container. Docker is just ignoring the rules. If you block all ports but then have port 81 open like you do in that section of docker compose, you would think that UFW would block docker but thats not the case. Going to http://yourip:81/ will show then NPM gui, even if you specifically use ufw to block 81. If you only expose port 80 and 443, you should be fine. Your NPM container would have to be compromised then they would have to break out of the container.

Also I think your issue is with your DNS. You should have an A record for the IP pointing to example.com and then a CNAME record pointing to sub.example.com

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Docker completely ignores UFW rules. If you check your ip tables you'll see docker rules are put in before UFW. For the 504 though, it sounds like traffic is not getting to NPM. Have you routed ports 80 and 443 to the docker container?

[–] tux7350@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

I use headscale on a VPS as an ingress point into my network and I love it. On top of headscale, I use two instances of traefik to make my network. I have one instance of traefik running on the vps which runs a couple of services that I want running 24/7(headscale-ui is nice). It pulls a subdomain certificate for TLS. So any services under say *.vps.example.com get routed to the VPS.

Then I have a wildcard TCP rule pointing the rest of the network traffic to my home server through headscale. My home server is running another instance of traefik where all my services are running. This pulls another wildcard cert for the rest of the *.example.com subdomains.

Cool thing about this setup is I can now have my DNS server rewrite *.example.com to my servers LAN IP. Now when my device is home, it works even when WAN is out. But when I'm out and about, it hits the public DNS and goes through my VPS. With traefik I can write a not !ClientIP rule and essentially block the VPS. Now I can host a service at home but also block it from being accessed from the public. But if I need access to the LAN remotely, I can just use a tailsacale client and get into headscale and see everything.

Its an odd network, but it's super flexible and works very well for my use case. If you have any questions I'd love to help you set something like this up :D

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