[00:20] *** nathani has quit IRC (Quit: WeeChat 1.3) [00:30] *** ziyourenxiang has quit IRC (Quit: Leaving) [00:33] *** nathani has joined #arpnetworks [00:57] *** mnathani_ is now known as mnathani [01:41] *** nathani has quit IRC (Quit: WeeChat 1.3) [01:43] *** nathani has joined #arpnetworks [01:44] *** nathani has quit IRC (Client Quit) [01:44] *** nathani has joined #arpnetworks [02:36] It's just an HTTP header in the request. And technically it's duplicity and boto (the python library) 16:45 <@up_the_irons> duplicity knows the difference between triple and double replicated S3 space? damn... [02:49] brycec: ah ok [06:57] brycec: S3 RRS pricing starts at $0.024/GB/month. $0.0.125 is for "infrequent access storage" [06:57] reduced durability vs reduced availability [06:59] s/0\.0\.125/0.0125/ [06:59] brycec: S3 RRS pricing starts at $0.024/GB/month. $0.0125 is for "infrequent access storage" [11:52] Yeah I knew that, was just running out the door and quoted the wrong figure. [11:53] I also have an automatic migration rule setup in S3 to move old backup chains to Glacier (which is $.007/GB) [14:11] ok :) [14:57] it's really sad when Comcast does native dual stack IPv4/IPv6 and their support reps don't know what IPv6 is [15:17] JC_Denton: do they know what IPv4 is? [15:21] heh, probably not [15:22] they referred to IPv4 as an "internet server" [15:22] haha [15:22] i was super lucky, i had a /60 that was working *fine* for damn near a year [15:22] now it drops with no renew every few days [15:22] drives me nuts [15:22] weird [15:23] does your IP address block keep changing? [15:23] there was an ISP here that used to give out dynamic IPv6 [15:23] i'm like what. [15:23] sometimes [15:23] That's what she said!! [15:24] for consumer internet i think giving out a /56 per user is a good idea [15:24] usually it just cold drops the lease and i notice because i have no v6 connectivity [15:24] i've got my hint set at /60, works for me [15:24] because you're meant to have a /64 for ethernet, a /64 for wifi, etc [15:24] i use a /64 for my main LAN, a /64 for guest network, and a /64 for VPN [15:24] but people are often thinking about huge bridged networks still atm [15:25] a /60 is probably good enough for most users :) [15:25] but even with a /32 you have a lot of space for /56s [15:26] i don't really see a need to separate wifi and ethernet [15:26] i do [15:26] i mean i don't see need but i do :) [15:27] why? [15:27] because ethernet is static, wifi is dynamic [15:27] how do you work with devices that sync with broadcasts? [15:27] i also transparently proxy wifi but not ethernet [15:27] i don't :) [15:27] i detect a boring LAN :P [15:27] yeah it is boring [15:27] my printer has cloud print [15:28] but works on ethernet too [15:28] it used to work on phone, dunno if it still does :) [15:28] but i don't find myself wnating to print from phone, and i can always use cloud print [15:28] if it's google cloud print capable, it should [15:28] it's google cloud print supporting [15:29] i don't print much, but i did print my chat from comcast for laughs [15:29] but it also supports hp network printer thing or whatever [15:29] even though it's not hp :) [15:29] i love my printer [15:29] JetDirect? [15:29] it was like $5 [15:29] and is wifi [15:29] and pages come out nicely [15:29] ahh yeh probably jetdirect [15:30] i haven't actually set it up in linux yet :) [15:30] i print from windows [15:31] it's mostly scanning that was a little more complicated [15:31] i wonder if linux can do network scanning? [15:34] WiFi for printers is a great idea as you can put them out of the way [15:35] the HP's have a decent EWS for web scanning [15:35] This isn't HP [15:36] it's cannon [15:36] apparently you may be able to use scangear in linux [15:49] ok that was weird. "it just works" with sane [16:22] Two words: Broadcast domains. 15:22:21 JC_Denton | i don't really see a need to separate wifi and ethernet [16:23] Why waste WiFi bandwidth with all that broadcast traffic desktops spew advertising and seeking [16:24] Admittedly at home my wifi and LAN are bridged, but that's mostly so devices like Chromecast work as expected. [16:24] ^^ [16:24] that's why mine is bridged ;) [16:24] i'm saying for most LANs it makes sense to bridge them [16:24] In my professional deployments, wifi and LAN are always separated. [16:24] "home LANs" [16:25] heh [16:25] Yours is a sad state of affairs mercutio when "it just works" is weird [16:26] to macvim or not to macvim [16:26] It has been years since I did anything with scanning and Linux [16:27] It used to be pretty cumbersome. [16:28] My multifunction printer/fax/scanner gets used for only one of those functions, and even then about only 3 times a year [16:28] JC still I think it is important to have the ability. [16:29] Bryce I didn't have scanning for ages but I use it a few times a year now [16:30] I've been pretty happy with {x,}sane [16:30] There are other ways often but damn convenient [16:30] Its probing is pretty good at making things "just work" [16:30] Yeah I was surprised [16:32] speaking of things that just work. windows 10 update just didn't work. [16:32] i have no idea why [16:59] mnathani: how did you get on with windows 10/ubuntu? [17:45] No luck as yet [18:14] i just got 14316 installed [18:19] woot installed zsh :) [18:20] although tab completion isn't working in it [18:20] now install oh-my-zsh [18:21] How do you check what build is installed [18:21] erk i resized my window and now it's blank [18:21] it says in bottom right [18:21] on the insider builds [18:22] vim starts instantly [18:22] much nicer than cygwin :) [18:24] yeh zsh bugs out too much [18:36] so vim works, ssh works, .. [18:36] there's a bit of weird console stuff [18:36] iperf works :) [18:53] gah, tmux doesn't work