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That sounds like you might like VyOS. I found it to be relatively easy to achieve exactly what I wanted, but went back to a GUI as it turned out I wanted a pet and not start a farm.

> but went back to a GUI as it turned out I wanted a pet and not start a farm.

This made me chuckle, I'm definitely going to quote this the next time our K8S cluster has issues


That is exactly why you don't see Windows being used anymore in big corporations. /s


The DC side is fully isolated except through a capacitor that is there to reduce EMI interference and is specifically built to "fail safe", except for the cheapest no-name imported power supplies. (https://www.pcbaaa.com/y1-capacitors-function-application-an...)


A Y capacitor prevents the neutral from shorting to ground, in this case Apple has cleverly avoided the issue by not having a ground whatsoever.

I am however curious about your design for a galvanically isolated AC-DC power supply.


That's not what the Y capacitor is doing here. All Y means is "high voltage withstand, will fail open, and we have receipts". Here, it's not line-to-ground, but primary-to-secondary.

Isolated ACDC converters are very common these days. Companies like Traco will sell you modules: https://www.tracopower.com/isolated-power-supplies


You'd use X for L to L/N, Y is for N to Ground. Those isolated power supplies are definitley grounded, definitely not what Apple is using, and will probably shut themselves off if they lose their ground connection (or at least signal a fault to the operator)


Unlikely, since you can quite happily buy two-prong power supplies.

And most packaged modules don't even have ground connections, e.g. https://www.tracopower.com/sites/default/files/products/data...

You're also confusing the Y designation, which relates to the capacitor properties, to the application. Not all Y capacitors are used for line-to-ground applications. However any application where a failure to a closed state would result in a shock hazard must use Y-rated capacitors.


The main problem is the bugginess in combination with the featurelessness. Usually you can work around bugs in some way or another, but many of the bugs in Boxes seem to come from the fact that control is taken away from the user in the first place, and there's no way around it except touching the source code.


Being wrong is one thing, on the other hand knowing that they don't know something is something humans are pretty good at (even if they might not admit to not knowing something and start bullshitting anyways). Current AI predictably fails miserably every single time.


> knowing that they don't know something is something humans are pretty good at (even if they might not admit to not knowing something and start bullshitting anyways)

I'd like to believe this, but I'm not a mind reader and I feel like the last decade has eroded a lot of my trust in the ability of adults to know when they're wrong. I still have hope for children, at least.


After what happened with Honey, I guess this probably means: they replace ads on pages with their own, pocket most of the money, and extort the sites who would have earned money with the ads into partnering with them.


In most jurisdictions yes AFAIK, if those services directly help an illegal activity, and you knew about the illegal activity.


If his was really true for banks there would be a large number of bankers in jail. This number being close to zero, I guess the courts are very lax at charging bankers for crimes.


Banks are a terrible example for this thread's argument. Banking is essentially the end result of what happens when businesses kowtow to the invasive demands of the government, implement ever-more invasive content policing, becoming de facto arms of the bureaucratic state.

A bank will drop you if they even think you might be doing something (demonstrably on paper) illegal. When opening an account, some of the very first questions a bank asks you are "where did you get this money" and "what do you do for work" - proactively making you responsible for committing to some type of story. All of the illegality you're trying to reference is happening under a backdrop of reams of paperwork that make it look like above board activity to compliance departments. Without that paperwork when shit does hit the fan, people working at the bank do tend to go to jail. But with that paperwork it's "nobody's fault" unless they manage to find a few bank employees to pin it on.

Needless to say, this type of prior restraint regime being applied to free-form communication would be an abject catastrophe.


From personal experience, the bank will drop you for having a relative with a name that happens to match someone on the "bad guy" list.


Banks do a massive amount of tracking and flagging. Even putting a joke “for drugs” in a Venmo field can cause issues. Plus reporting large transactions. There was a massive post on HN yesterday about how often banks close startup accounts due to false positives.


All this flagging seems to be more for "cover your *ss" reasons, because the real criminals continue doing their business everyday.


> the real criminals continue doing their business everyday

Any source for that? Media loves to blame banks for everything, but when you go into the details it always seems pretty marginal (e.g. the HSBC Mexico stuff).


It cannot be marginal because drug traffic, just as an example, moves billions of dollars every year. They certainly have schemes and someone in the banking system must be complying with these schemes. Every time the officials uncover one of these schemes, banks are miraculously not charged of anything and they don't even give back the profits of the illegal operation.


Ok, like selling gasoline to the getaway car driver?


> and you knew about the illegal behavior

Your analogy is terrible and doesn’t make sense.

If you provide a service that is used for illegal behavior AND you know it’s being used that way AND you explicitly market your services to users behaving illegally AND the majority of your product is used for illegal deeds THEN you’re gonna have a bad time.

If one out of ten thousand people use your product for illegal deeds you’re fine. If it’s 9 out of 10 you probably aren’t.


> If one out of ten thousand people use your product for illegal deeds you’re fine.

This logic clearly makes the prison of someone like the owner of Telegram difficult to justify, since 99.999% of messages in telegram are completely legal.


If 10,000 people out of 10 million are doing illegal things and you know about it or you are going out of your way to turn a blind eye then you’re gonna have a bad time.

This really isn’t that complicated.


But how would you know about this illegal activity, if the product can be used by anyone? Only if you were eavesdropping on your users...


Because in this case, you are.

Keep in mind that as soon as you store user accounts you keep user data, which is perhaps a trivial form of eavesdropping, but clearly something law enforcement takes an interest in.


The government tells you.


Working as a car driver isn’t illegal. Working as a getaway car driver is.

You’re making the opposite point of what you intended.



Two different implementations might make two different local times out of that, e.g. due to not being aware of changing DST/timezone policies. Hence the recommendation of separating between user/clock/calendar time (which must be exact to a human) and absolute/relative timestamps (which must be exact to a computer).


I mean, that'd probably just be the worst case: you're afraid of social situations, but you also don't like to be alone.


Also, ads. I guess the shorter the time is between clicking the play button and the ad starting, the more people will have "seen" more of the ad before deciding that the video isn't worth watching the ad.


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