Switching off IPv4
Due to the future cost of IPv4 in AWS, it was finally time to disable IPv4 for this blog.
An attempt to do something with IT!
Due to the future cost of IPv4 in AWS, it was finally time to disable IPv4 for this blog.
In this article I describe my first experiences with my FIDO2 security key from NitroKey. Interesting is the different implementation at different services. The main issue remains the lack of acceptance.
Windows now supports encryption with Bitlocker in the Home Edition of Windows, but the implementation needs improvement.
In the article I describe my personal experience with the Windows Storage Pool. I originally used the pool because of its flexibility and protection against disk failures, but I encountered problems with unexplained storage space consumption. The lack of success of my attempts to solve the problem and further consideration I present in this article.
I have finally activated RSS on this blog.
Why this is important to me and how I managed to do it is explained in this article.
I already wrote this article partly on the 30th birthday of SMS at the beginning of December 2022, but then it had lost relevance. In view of the current discussion about switching off SMS as the second factor in Twitter, I would like to take up the topic again.
Today is not only the birthday of important people, this blog is also one year old. This is a good opportunity to look back and evaluate which goals have been achieved and which have not.
There are updates to some articles.
You can do great things with DNS. For instance, breaking this blog. Sometimes it helps to read RFCs.
After ChatGPT was allowed to write two articles in this blog, I want to go into why this is interesting but won’t happen again. I describe how AI will hopefully simplify my job in the future and what consequences that might have for society. I also briefly address the issue of security in AI.
I was considering whether it would make sense to use the framework laptop with different OS to plug in as one laptop each. But I doubt whether the IT department would support that.