Need to drive your old school RWD ride in the snow? With the right tools, you will be able to get around quite well, here's how.
Want to run MS-DOS, Windows 3.x, Windows 95/98 on your vintage hardware but don't want to dig up floppy disks, floppy drives, CD-ROM drivers, etc?
I show you a shortcut using VirtualBox and a USB HDD dock.
Sounds like victory. 😜 Using Summit Racing's 2 chamber mufflers.
Auto DIY tip - If you work under old cars much, you will have rust/oil/grime/etc fall into your eyes/face and it is no fun. Goggles can help a bit, but can fog easily and don't protect your nose/ears/etc from debris.
Recently, I went through and rust stripped/undercoated the chassis and panels on my Olds 442, and I thought "I wonder how well those face shields would work for keeping the debris away?"
Turns out they work pretty well.
StealthNet Labs team member Albert Bryant (who works in educational software development) tells us about how technology is changing the US education system and what opportunities are coming online for parents and students to have more choices in education. We'll have a full video as well as subject-specific excerpts of the interview up later this week.
Synopsis:
Wishing everyone a wonderful holiday with their friends and family!
"Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men."
Luke 2:14
StealthNet Labs is now an official sponsor of the GhostBSD Operating System.
I've been fascinated with UNIX and Linux since I first dove into it for a DIY loadbalancer project at work back in 2007. You can build almost anything out of these operating systems if you can learn some programming skills. We use Linux and FreeBSD a LOT for our product/services, and deploy FreeBSD where possible because of its amazing reliability and stability.
GhostBSD is a project to build a FreeBSD-based desktop/laptop OS you can run as an alternative to Windows or Linux on your own PC. I've used it at work for a few years now and it's just as solid as any other FreeBSD-based system with the ease of a point and click interface.
If you're a techie and you're wanting to check out UNIX, GhostBSD is a great place to start.
This project has come very far on very limited resources so we are excited to see what can be done with a little help.
If you do a lot of remote admin/support with RDP, VNC, SSH, even HTML web pages...here's a great tool to organize all of your connections and keep things moving quickly:
If you've used commercial or enterprise tools like LogMeIn, DameWare, BeyondTrust, Teamviewer, etc...this will put all of your decentralized connections on a dashboard just like those services and allow you to have multiple connections open in separate tabs.