radikal.social is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
radikal.social was created by a group of activists to offer federated social media for the radical left in and around Denmark.

Administered by:

Server stats:

162
active users

#wireless

0 posts0 participants0 posts today

LOL

"#WhiteHouse said the installation was an effort to increase internet availability at the complex. They said that some areas of the property could not get cell service and that the existing Wi-Fi infrastructure was overtaxed.

... the effort was “to improve #WiFi connectivity on the complex.”

It is less clear, however, that the #Starlink internet service will significantly expand #wireless internet capacity in buildings where fiber cables already provide access."

nytimes.com/2025/03/17/us/poli

Questions about the business interests of Elon Musk conflicting with his status as a presidential adviser and major Trump donor have persisted for weeks.
The New York Times · Elon Musk’s Starlink Expands Across White House ComplexBy Maggie Haberman

For a long time, I used three access points at home. A few months ago, I decided to downsize and see if, with technological advances, I could reduce the number of APs. Obviously, the more remote areas would be penalized, but at the moment I don't need a lot of bandwidth, just stability. So I kept only the Omada 670 - hung from the ceiling, roughly in the center of the house. The coverage was fairly complete, except for a few unimportant corners. It was ok-ish.

I had the opportunity to get a Ruckus R550 at an interesting price (for a Ruckus, of course) and, despite having lower speed performance than the Omada, I wanted to try it. Initially I was disappointed. The coverage was almost the same (but the Ruckus is in a slightly worse position, about a meter from the Omada but resting on a wooden piece of furniture), so I didn't see the advantages. However, I left it running, since I had it. The network remained stable for months.

A few days ago I needed the poe injector I use for the Ruckus (while the Omada is powered by its own power supply) so I reconnected the Omada and turned off the Ruckus. Same channels, same configuration.

Suddenly, I realized the difference. Even seeing (almost) the same signal levels from the monitoring apps, the actual performance is very different. Even in a distant room with many walls (of brick and concrete) in between, the 5Ghz signal of the Ruckus remains stable and reliable, while with the Omada it was much less stable. As "bars", almost the same. But with the Omada it is a continuous packet loss and switching to 2.4 GHz. Moreover, the most distant device (a Raspberry PI A+ with FreeBSD) with the Omada loses signal several times a day, with the Ruckus no problem and despite having a minimum bandwidth, it does not lose packets.

Going back to the Omada for a few days showed me that yes, there are differences. Yesterday I reconnected the Ruckus. Gone, again, all the problems. Of course, with the cost of a Ruckus (on offer) I get 3 "superior" Omadas, but the difference is there.

#WiFI#Omada#Ruckus

I'm so proud! #Sennheiser never would have allowed a #garage-built #proton-pack to make it in to their behind-the-scenes video! (That's me starting at 2:36)

youtube.com/watch?v=tZZmv2LQ-Es

For contrast, don't miss the Sennheiser #Spectera video.

youtube.com/watch?v=Qvi36Lq4eHc

#Shure #IEM #wireless #electronics #telemetry

I'm doing the next generation protonpack #fpga telemetry system as an #opensource #openhardware design.

Team #mastodon will help me out, right?

github.com/poleguy/protonpack/

FreeBSD 14.2 release candidate

<lists.freebsd.org/archives/fre> thanks @cperciva

<old.reddit.com/r/freebsd/comme>

「The biggest change in 14.2-RC1 is that the installer images contain some wifi firmware, and the installer knows how to download and install firmware packages.

This is important for solving the chicken-and-egg problem of systems which need firmware packages in order to connect to the internet – it's hard to download and install firmware if you don't already have the firmware you need to connect to the internet.

If you have hardware which needs firmware to work, please test!」

lists.freebsd.orgFreeBSD 14.2-RC1 Now Available

For years I have thought the third-party 360 controller receiver that I bought on Amazon was just junk. Then I found out it works flawlessly on Linux.

JUST TODAY I found out you can manually install the driver on Windows. Not the 10.x driver from this year, but the 2.x driver from 2009.

- Open "Device Manager" (if it still exists at the time of reading)
- The "Other devices" section should be auto-expanded
- Right click "Unknown device" if you don't see anything else corresponding to your adapter.
- Select "Update driver"
- DO NOT SELECT "Search automatically for drivers". That will fail every time
- Select "Browse my computer for drivers" and then "Let me pick from a list of available drivers" and then under "Xbox 360 Peripherals" select the "Xbox 360 Wireless Receiver for Windows Version: 2.1.0.1349 [8/13/2009]"

GAME ON!

Search Keyword: "X-360 PC Wireless Gaming Receiver"