Wireless power sounds like and RFI nightmare. It will never match the efficiency of a cable either.
cmnybo
It looks like Meta or Yandex apps must be installed for the exploit to work. Luckily I don't have any of those installed on my Android devices.
They can't see much through the electrical tape over the lens.
That would be nice. I have way more devices with USB A plugs than USB C.
That seems like a good way to increase the cost of the motherboard if it has more than a couple USB C ports. That's a lot of signals to route to every port. I just want the ports to be appropriately marked so I know what functions they support.
They should just remove the DRM from all streaming services. The fact that new TV shows can be downloaded within minutes of airing is a good indicator that it doesn't work for its intended purpose. It just makes me find another source since I can't watch them using my preferred browser and operating system.
Just run the audio through a dynamic range compressor. Then everything will be just as loud as the commercials.
If you stretch, kink, or squish a CAT5 cable, there is a good chance that it will not work at 1G even if none of the conductors are broken or shorted. Sometimes they will initially connect at 1G, then fall back to 100M after some random amount of time making troubleshooting more annoying.
If find the missed call notifications to be very helpful. I never remember to check my phone, but I'm on the computer all the time. I also like the ability to remote control the music player from my phone since the computer is hooked up to an amplifier with speakers in multiple rooms.
Every single time the land line ISPs have gotten money for rural broadband, they use it for something else and don't build anything. Starlink actually built a network that works. Many places have gotten decent 5G home internet too.
I have been promised fiber for over a decade yet the only wired connection available is a DSL network that's been so poorly maintained that it barely even functions.
My dynamic IPv6 prefix hasn't changed in a couple of years. It only changed because I reset the router config and that changed my DUID. That's good enough for everything I host. I don't even bother with dynamic DNS anymore.
I wouldn't bother with trying to host an email server from a residential connection though. Even if you can get your ISP to open port 25 for you, many email servers won't accept mail from residential IP addresses.
Have you tried Tiny Core Linux? It supports a 486DX, but they recommend a Pentium 2. I think the biggest issue you will have is finding programs that will run on such old hardware.