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TWN, SK, and JPN were all authoritarian when industrializing. Similar with US too, to be honest.


> India received Lawrow recently, he is not allowed in any EU country.

And? Your point? Speaking to diplomats is suddenly taboo?

> India is not dependent on Russian oil

No. But, it is dependent on oil and gas being cheap enough to make basic inputs with. It is a region and country on the brink of poverty in many ways. What did you expect?


> And? Your point? Speaking to diplomats is suddenly taboo?

You can speak on phone, receiving one from countries killing civilians on purpose is making a statement. If you make a statement you will be heard, and I don't think many EU countries will be happy. Not to mention, you know humanitarian aspects - you can buy your oil without blood.


Not everyone shares those sentiments -- and that's all they are, just sentiments.

And, why hasn't the EU shut off all oil and gas purchases from Russia immediately?

Why should a poor country support this sanctions regime and then witness massive internal disruption?

Most of the countries and populations of the world have in fact NOT imposed sanctions.


> And, why hasn't the EU shut off all oil and gas purchases from Russia immediately?

Because they let themselves get too dependent on foreign energy, so doing so would have meant letting their own people freeze.


And, India needs cheap oil and gas to make fertilizers to feed its population.

You are free and rich enough to do this, be my guest: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iD_6L_ktkM8


India needs cheap oil and gas to make fertilizers to feed its population.

You are free and rich enough to do this, be my guest: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iD_6L_ktkM8


Wow. The manufactured consent generating machine is still working as expected.


You never ever oppose "the current thing."


Exactly. 0 consideration that the media may be constructing narratives and feeding them to us, instead of being objective.


What about UDP?


Not yet unfortunately. I'll add it in the future, but I'm preoccupied with homework right now.


i have yet to encounter a case where a udp-tunnel has a practical advantage over tcp; on the other hand, corporate/hotel/coffeeshop firewalls that block anything not tcp/443 are super commom.


Thanks.


What about it? WireGuard uses UDP. You don't need privileges to open up a UDP socket.


Does this SOCKS5 tunnel support UDP?


Oh! I don't think so; at least, I don't think go-socks5 does.


SOCKS5 supports UDP, but yeah it does not look like go-socks5 does.


Does Rust support it?


The Rust user-mode WireGuard proxy mentioned upthread does UDP. Netstack does UDP as well; it's just that this particular tool doesn't, yet.


qbittorrent-nox-static (go with 4.3.9 for now, 4.4.1 still has a memory leak) is the way to go, IMO, on a linux server.


What's a good RDP Server on Linux?


As far as I'm aware there are no good RDP servers on Linux.

By good I mean one that would give an experience at least somewhat close to RDP on Windows. All the ones I've tried have been orders of magnitude away.

A good one should also allow for a key RDP feature which is to seamlessly transition between physical and remote desktop sessions. Meaning, I log in to my desktop at home, I leave and log in via RDP and get the same desktop session, which I can again resume when I get back home.

This is either not possible or doesn't work well last time I tested xrdp and friends.

Of course, if things has changed in the last year or so, I'd be delighted to hear about it. A good RDP server for Linux is what's keeping me from transitioning away from Windows on my main machine.


> Meaning, I log in to my desktop at home, I leave and log in via RDP and get the same desktop session, which I can again resume when I get back home. This is either not possible or doesn't work well last time I tested xrdp and friends.

This works with x2go.


> This works with x2go.

Ah, I don't think I even got that far with x2go. Dismissed it due to performance.

But good to know!


Strange because x2go performs better than anything else. Though you have to set the "Connection" settings correctly for your use. Setting for too low a bandwidth is just as bad as too high. "WAN" with "256-jpeg" works pretty well for me.


> Strange because x2go performs better than anything else

If you mean better than anything else available on Linux, you're probably right.

The problem is that it's still an order or magnitude behind Windows-to-Windows RDP, which is my benchmark.

But thanks for reminding me, I'll give it another whirl.


A volunteer has programmed and glued all the pieces together for Gnome's session sharing using RDP: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-remote-desktop/-/issues...


NoMachine has been the nicest option I've found. I've previously tried x2go and xrdp, and whilst they worked, I kept looking for something better until I found NoMachine.


Funny. NoMachine is exactly what I use right now. Decent functionality. Reputable company. Etc.

But, RDP's bandwidth efficiency on Windows is unbeatable AFAIK. I wish the Linux and macOS world had something like that.


The best alternative I've found for macOS is Jump Desktop's Fluid protocol.


How does Jump Desktop Connect[0] compare? I hear really good things about it on macOS

[0] https://jumpdesktop.com/connect


Jump Desktop’s Fluid protocol is shockingly good- by far the best remote desktop solution I’ve ever found for macOS.


Can it be run independently OR does it depend on Jump Desktop's servers as a connection mediator?


You're probably aware of this, but once the connection has been mediated via the cloud, data will usually flow directly between client and server. But yes, to avoid this initial connection mediation, you'll need the "Cloudless Fluid Connections" from the Enterprise team plan[0]. I use the basic $35 single user macOS program which requires cloud mediation.

I don't like the forced cloud mediation either, but the protocol is just so much better, almost comically better, than NoMachine, RDP-over-macOS, VNC, X11-forwarding, Screen Sharing.app, etc.

[0] https://app.jumpdesktop.com/pricing


Thanks for this info.

I wish they did offer Cloudless in their regular version.


Debian, Ubuntu and Fedora ship with packages for it: xrdp (the session manager) and xorgxrdp (the actual X server that speaks the RDP protocol). I’ve been using them for almost a decade, and even got remote audio working on Ubuntu:

https://github.com/rcarmo/ubuntu-xrdp


Only one I know of is xrdp. It usually works.



China, yes.

India, no.

Most of the water entrapment areas of India are within India's borders.

And, the rest come from the Himalayas, where it isn't easy to divert the flows, and most of those mountains are under Indian control. See: https://www.thetibetpost.com/en/features/44-environment-and-...

The real threat is China launching attacks from Tibet, against India.

Why? Because much of Chinese trade goes through the Indian Ocean, where India has negative control.

So, it is easy to see China getting wary of India and launching a territorial war from Tibet, in order to gain dominance over India. And, of course, Pakistan would join in.


> Which doesn't really make sense with a democratically elected jewish former comedian being president. (thats from https://www.rt.com/russia/551294-kremlin-goal-ukraine-offens...)

Is racism in America gone because we had a black POTUS?

Zelenskyy is backed by an oligarch who funds right-wing neo-fascist groups.

Dig deeper.


Ground-based hypersonics and right-wing neo-fascist terrorist groups right on your border are not threat you can respond to quickly enough.


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