Either your provider uses CGNAT or you're doing something wrong. The former can be confirmed by checking if the WAN address in your router is in the 100.64.0.0/10 block.
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Either your provider uses CGNAT or you're doing something wrong. The former can be confirmed by checking if the WAN address in your router is in the 100.64.0.0/10 block.
Unusual choice - using an RFC1918 range may collide with customers' subnets as well as their own internal systems - but CGNAT it is. Unless you can request and/or pay for a public IPv4, forget about being connectable...
I am using a TPLink router, should I use Virtual Servers or Port Triggering?
- Virtual servers: permanently forward incoming connections on ports a..b to ports c..d on a LAN host. The ranges can differ, but their size must match. (This is the one you want.)
- Port triggering: when a LAN host makes outgoing connections to ports a..b, dynamically forward incoming connections on ports c..d to it.
In both instances a=b and c=d is allowed, and there can't be any overlap between rules.
One day we'll all have IPv6 and this won't be necessary anymore... but it won't be today.
Don't believe everything you see...
http://www.sb-innovation.de/attachme...chmentid=21498
Hi Anon, I tried figuring out where to post this question but wanted a speedy answer. On private trackers which tool would you recommend? RatioMaster Plus or mRatio, or would you rather go for BiglyBT extreme mod? I am quite torn between the three options, albeit one being the complete bundle and wanted an expert advice to prevent any complications for myself.
If you're as new as your other post says, here are some tips to get started.
- Make a throwaway account at a random open signups tracker and use that as a sandbox, it's the best way to get real experience with near-zero risk.
- Search before you ask, chances your question has already been answered before are very high.
- Check the resources at http://www.sb-innovation.de/showthread.php?t=18705 and http://www.sb-innovation.de/showthread.php?t=19749 that are directly relevant to what you want to do.
- There are more programs here besides the three you mentioned, and all the advice above applies to them too.
I feel like I haven't been here in a while! How's everyone?
Also -- I need a new coffee machine. Any suggestions?
I'm alive and you're always welcome back :wub:
Braun's stuff is solid if you're looking for drip coffee; for capsules, I have no idea.Quote:
Also -- I need a new coffee machine. Any suggestions?
I deliberately didn't buy one of these in an effort to rate-limit to one cup a day :wtinfoil:
delonghi dedica seemed nice. Pads tend to be very expensive and drip tends to be kind of meh. This seems like a good middleground if you buy a grinder. But it might be a bit on the "cheap" (expensive enough tho.... but in comparison) side to be worth it.
Alright, your turn now. Is there anything I should be aware of regarding Crucial's NVMe SSDs? I'm asking because $60 for 1 TB of solid-state storage sounds too good to be true...
Checked Crucial's site. It was saying $60 before, now it's $51.99 even after triple-checking with a fresh browser and Tor :iiam: Obviously you have to add shipping and taxes (which are pretty significant here), but my point still stands, the specs seem very good for the price range.