

Are the https requests being sent to an IP address assigned to node B? If so you either need an nginx reverse proxy on node B or NAT with port forwarding.


Are the https requests being sent to an IP address assigned to node B? If so you either need an nginx reverse proxy on node B or NAT with port forwarding.


Google figured out the translation for me lol…and yes I know I made your point… although as I said in another comment I do try to be noob friendly…that just only applies to noobs.


LMFAO, I do try to be friendly to noobs…but I am naturally a pedant and so when not dealing with noobs I let the pedant out a bit more. But I do agree with the sentiment that the power users are not welcoming.


Computer engineering is typically hardware and low level software design which doesn’t really fit the analogy you’re going for.


Never mind the fact that you can also run Linux on a Mac…I agree with this pet peeve


I have had calls with SUSE sales reps because I’m in the enterprise space, can confirm they use Google meet and Google workspace in general. Still not FOSS, but not Microsoft.
Honestly to play devil’s advocate, California’s law almost is the lesser of 2 evils, if software can ask the OS for age verification then maybe companies will stop rolling out actually invasive verification, and if the OS verification is handled by the sysadmin then it satisfies both sides, people that want to have age verification, and people that think it should be left in the hands of parents as a parenting role. Me personally? I’d rather we have no verification at all but that isn’t the path the world is moving down.