What Are You Doing Right Now
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@brianlittlejohn To tempt you further http://www.islayinfo.com/islay_laphroaig_distillery.html
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Going to relax after a long day of planning MangoCon for you all Off to enjoy the hottub!
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Just got the failed server back up and running.
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The day has started... apparently.
Ingesting coffee and sifting through my notifications -
Got google authentication working for SSH/SFTP, successfully created a mount bind, and I was able to piece together a stack of .crt files from the old webserver's cpanel backup into a valid .pem cert chain. Good times!
I will share my full notes in a new topic once I have time to edit them into a more readable format
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Just got at work.. Hmm Someone gave me food for breakfast.. Lols
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Trying to reset our router Cisco wrv210 to factory Reset the device with a hard reset.
I still can't reset the device, used the paper clip still not working -
You know that you are using hard core networking gear when it requires a paperclip.
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@scottalanmiller said:
You know that you are using hard core networking gear when it requires a paperclip.
I think I pressed really hard the reset button and now it's broken.
Is there any way i can open the back of this router?
@JaredBusch @scottalanmiller @nadnerB -
Whoops!
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Any visible screws? This might easily be a "pop the tabs" style unit where you have to know where to press on it.
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@Joy said:
Is there any way i can open the back of this router?
Hammers work well..
On a serious note, remove the feet. The case screws are generally under them.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Any visible screws? This might easily be a "pop the tabs" style unit where you have to know where to press on it.
There's no visible screw, only the four black rubber
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Possible, but unlikely, that there are screws under the rubbers.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Joy said:
Is there any way i can open the back of this router?
Hammers work well..
On a serious note, remove the feet. The case screws are generally under them.
I'm removing them now! yes screws hiding
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Ah ha, sneaky there are!
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I was going to reply but you seem to have sorted it
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@scottalanmiller said:
Possible, but unlikely, that there are screws under the rubbers.
Extremely common. What ever gave you the idea that there are not? Most low end devices are this way. it costs too much (engineering time and production line) to do otherwise.