Yes, after a decade of trying to buy these, suddenly the low power, low cost SBC market has exploded. Now you can get x86, AMD64, MIPS, ARM32, ARM64, FreeScale and more for cheap!
There was once a good old day when Linksys was good...
I run DD-WRT on a Netgear Blackhawk (D7000 iirc, not one of the new ones), and it's been solid. Of course Comcast decided to push a friendly firmware update to my cable modem this weekend which reset the config, took it out of bridge mode and re-enabled the modem's own DHCP and routing services (and Lord knows what else), taking me offline. Annoying (not to mention a potential security nightmare)... mostly because I spent an hour jacking around before it even occurred to me to login to the modem and check it's settings.
Are you me? lol
This happened to me a couple weeks ago - same setup, same software, different router.
For home laptop use (non-gaming) be sure to check out PC-BSD. It's screaming fast, super stable and very responsive.
In this particular article it was a solid, but not fastest, performer in the transcoding benchmarks they ran, which were about as close to web serfing and video watching. PC-BSD is the fastest bar none if you're compiling software or iops intensive workloads.
In the US, 102 of the stores are convenient store style stores, not normal sized Walmarts
All the closings in the US are within 10 miles of another one. and it said they are all the smaller non SUper Walmarts style ones. aka older.
It was really more than that, not non super walmarts, they are closing down their experiment against Family Dollar like stores (the article specifically called them convenience stores). There were a handful of other versions as well, I'm guessing some that weren't making money.
FTA, this looks like it only affects the SSH clients... Right?
"The problem involved a bug that exposed a memory leak to a malicious SSH server," Cox explained. "Because the data in question didn't cross any trust or execution boundaries, the malicious server could get the client to possibly leak sensitive authentication key data."
I think it's both. I ran my update playbook and everything was patched within about 3 minutes 🙂
@Dashrender Here is the generalized spreadsheet I put together, once I'm assigned the /48 block from the ISP I fill it in and it auto populates everywhere else on the spreadsheet.