- Joined
- Jun 21, 2021
- Messages
- 3,112 (2.50/day)
System Name | daily driver Mac mini M2 Pro |
---|---|
Processor | Apple proprietary M2 Pro (6 p-cores, 4 e-cores) |
Motherboard | Apple proprietary |
Cooling | Apple proprietary |
Memory | Apple proprietary 16GB LPDDR5 unified memory |
Video Card(s) | Apple proprietary M2 Pro (16-core GPU) |
Storage | Apple proprietary onboard 512GB SSD + various external HDDs |
Display(s) | LG UltraFine 27UL850W (4K@60Hz IPS) |
Case | Apple proprietary |
Audio Device(s) | Apple proprietary |
Power Supply | Apple proprietary |
Mouse | Apple Magic Trackpad 2 |
Keyboard | Keychron K1 tenkeyless (Gateron Reds) |
VR HMD | Oculus Rift S (hosted on a different PC) |
Software | macOS Sonoma 14.7 |
Benchmark Scores | (My Windows daily driver is a Beelink Mini S12 Pro. I'm not interested in benchmarking.) |
I'm glad that works for you. My home broadband connection isn't particularly speedy and its reliability is questionable (it's the cable monopoly) so I'm not motivated to bother with such a configuration.On mobile I use Firefox w ublock origin on my phone and VPN into my home connection
You can add VPN to android too and my router has VPN server and whatever policies I have on my home network get applied to connecting VPN clients
I used to do that sort of thing like twenty years ago; I installed custom Tomato firmware on a Buffalo wifi router and used three blocklists. Today I favor solutions that will deal with scripts etc. rather than brute force site blocks.
This thread encouraged me to look at some mobile-based workarounds. I'm currently playing with an Adguard DNS profile on my backup iPhone. It has partial success in filtering ads. It's better than nothing so I might keep it. I'll try it out on my iPad next before I finally apply it to my primary phone. It does look like I can disable the DNS profile so if I run into a problem with disabled functionality that I really need, I can temporarily disable it.
But truthfully I'd rather have 85% ad blocking and normal functionality rather than 100% ad blocking and a bunch of partly broken sites/services. It simply isn't worth my time and effort in 2024 to try to block every single ad. I have more important things to focus on and I'm okay picking the low hanging fruit.
It was easier twenty years ago when the people serving ads weren't all that smart and the people who wrote adblockers back then were still just as savvy as they are today. Even primordial Internet Junkbuster worked great in the late Nineties.
Today network-based blocking is a good secondary protection strategy but it really can't be relied on as a primary security strategy. There are too many script-based things that can sneak by a host block. 'Twas a great strategy twenty years ago. Today, not as much.
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