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373 lines
30 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2913
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Title: HPR2913: Windows, SDN, and Firewalls
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2913/hpr2913.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 13:10:12
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---
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This image PR episode 2,913 entitled, Windows, SCN and firewalls and is part of the series
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networking, it is posted by BitO and in about 41 minutes long and carry my next visit flag.
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The summary is, being a Windows user for the past three years, information on SCN and
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the UI approach to the home firewall.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Bit or web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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And here we go.
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So hello everyone, this is BitO, Hacker Public Radio.
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So it's been about, last upload from me was March 19, 2014, about 1,999 days ago, it's
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been about 5 years, but it's been a long 5 years.
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So first thing I want to say is, I just want to say that Hacker Public Radio has been
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an instrumental community for me for the past 5 years, I've been listening to Hacker
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Public Radio and it's provided me a lot of insight on what's been going on throughout
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the community and a lot of the changes I have gone that have been going on in the world.
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But in the past, in the last 5 years, I've been able to travel the world for work.
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I've deployed a lot of things for work, a lot of cool things, a lot of really cool and
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amazing things.
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I've taken on a new role which moves me from working solely inside of data centers to
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working a lot more with networks.
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But in those 5 years, I learned a lot about data center operations, data center infrastructure.
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I learned a lot about the different parts of the world and how we all come together as
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one planet.
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I've also read over like 3 dozen books in the past 5 years at least and that's been very
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useful as a career, both for my career and for my personal life.
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Another thing I've learned is that it's really important to have your house in order.
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What I mean by that is opportunities are going to come across every day.
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But if you're not ready to take those opportunities, you're not going to be entirely focused
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or 100% committed to make sure that opportunity succeeds.
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Some of the things that I've done in the past 5 years and from a personal perspective,
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which is to help get my house in order, has been paying off debt and focusing on long-term
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financial goals.
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I know that's something that most people don't think about here at a young age especially,
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but having the ability to get rid of the mundane expenses and service bills here and
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expenses, spending money over here and credit cards over there getting rid of all that
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stuff from your day to day can help you tremendously on developing long-term financial goals and
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having those long-term financial goals helps you identify where you need to focus on and
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also helps you in your decision-making when taking on no opportunities.
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But three things that I continue to live by, something that I've learned on the Finding
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Japan podcast, but it's humility, humanity and harmony.
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These are three things I have committed to strive for in my personal life, work and hobbies.
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This is in the past 5 years, I've seen, I've been in and out of a lot of airports.
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I've seen a lot of different IT infrastructures and a lot of cool technologies, but without
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thinking about the people first and thinking about how people make the world go round and
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how we should always keep in mind of the folks who are around us helping us deliver that
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awesome next shiny project or awesome next shiny technology.
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Keeping those people around and taking care of them and treating them with respect and
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as your peer will keep you on an even and predictable course in life.
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And that's something that I found to be very important.
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But enough of the intro, let's start the show off in the wrong direction, Windows.
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So in the past 5 years, from 2014 to 2016, I was using Fedora Linux exclusively as my primary
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workstation.
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I actually did something a little crazy where I was using it as a primary workstation and
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I would have KVM running and I'll have two VMs, one which was my firewall and the second
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which was just a random VPN box.
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I would have those two VMs running in the background while I use the workstation as an everyday
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workstation.
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Sounds a little crazy, but I learned a lot doing things that way.
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I learned how to automate the startup and decryption of hard drives and using USB keys and
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I learned a lot about automating KVM hosts as the most in the best way you possibly can.
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I learned a lot about introducing a 10 gigabit networking into your environment.
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That's when I first started to touch 10 gigabit nicks and tying those as setting up bridges
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so that my VM host can use that for my clients.
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I found that to be a very amazing experience to have put myself through the heartache
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of having a Fedora box be my primary workstation as well as run my hypervisor and run all my
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VMs, which was my firewall for the house.
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So that was a very interesting experience, but what I learned out of that was number one,
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I learned that when you break something and it's a critical system to your entire household,
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you better know how to recover that immediately.
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If you don't, you're going to have a lot of angry users and I feel that having learned
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how to have this all-in-one box do everything inside of the home, it was a great experience,
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but I realized that I needed a more stable environment, something that I can test things
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in my lab and have the other half of the network not be touched by that so that other folks
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can use or have other services on my network run without any issues.
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So this was my adventure into Windows.
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So 2016, I believe this was January 2016.
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I began using Windows as a full-time machine.
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I used a lot of old hardware, some AMD FX processor stuff and it's just old stuff, but it
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still ran Windows 10 without any issues.
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I still was able to use most of the features available in Windows 10, but one of the things
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that I found to be a longing that I had missed from the Linux command line was, you
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know, whether I'm using aptitude or yum or whatever the other tool is in Fedora, I realized
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that I wanted to use something similar to a package manager in PowerShell.
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So what I came across was something called Chocolaty or Chocolaty, yeah, it's got to be
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Chocolaty.
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And this tool is an excellent tool for, think of it as a package manager that you can
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run inside of Windows PowerShell and you can from a few command lines, a few commands,
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Chocolaty install, Audacity and in a few seconds, it will parse you and say, hey, are you
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sure you want to install Audacity?
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And sure enough, you'll get the latest version of Audacity installed onto your Windows machine.
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If you ever want to upgrade any software that you installed your Chocolaty, you just
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Chocolaty update all and it'll update all the software that all the software packages
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that you've controlled using that command line tool.
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An amazing tool, very easy to install and very reliable in terms of having the most
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up-to-date packages available.
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So most people out there, I feel that, you know, when you're downloading software off
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the internet or you're downloading it off some sketchy website or, you know, you're just
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installing something randomly, I feel that, you know, that's probably one of those experiences
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in Windows that just makes it feel so dumb down that doesn't really make you want to
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use it anymore because you feel like you don't need this dumb down version where I have
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to click through this website and click on this box and click on this download link and
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click on this executable and click through this executable and hit next.
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I think that's one of the things that I definitely give Linux and, you know, any operating
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system, any Linux operating system props for having a very good package manager.
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So yeah, so Chocolaty, it's a great tool for download and free software from the Windows
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PowerShell command line.
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The second tool that I would say that has been instrumental in my Windows experience
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for the past three years has been sublime text, sublime text, it's an excellent tool.
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This is a text editor.
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It's very powerful.
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I use this to quickly parse data and conduct, you know, crazy red axis.
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It's allow me red axis to allow me to edit data and then copy that data over to spreadsheet
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or CSV values and do something else with it.
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Overall, just a great tool.
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I feel that it's a little more powerful because one example that I have for using sublime
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text is, you know, let's say you have, you know, you copy and paste some value off of
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some inspect element in Chrome and, you know, you want to be able to organize this data
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so that for every div tag or whatever, you want a new line, hey, just like you do in
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BI or said, you know, you're looking up through a rejects and then you'll, you know, you'll
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say, hey, insert a new line here.
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But one thing I like about sublime text is that, you know, you can reject search, you know,
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those div tags or whatever it is that you're searching for and it'll basically highlight
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every single one of those and it'll give you the opportunity to hit the enter button
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and you get a new line, it'll give you opportunity to backspace that that that rejects
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value and replace it with something by typing and replacing and seeing the live update of
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that.
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I feel that that's a very powerful tool because so many times have I thought that my
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rejects search or said or my, my awk has done something and the only time I find out
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is when I run the data through the whatever tool that I'm using and find out, oh, it
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only actually replaced, you know, half or just the one or just, you know, one out of 16,
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you know, I, I just find that visual response of what I'm editing to be a lot more powerful
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inside of a sublime text.
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But there's a ton of other tools and features inside sublime text and I highly recommend
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it.
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It's definitely, definitely something that you should put in your Windows toolbox.
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Alright, so in summary, you know, it's important that it's important to understand what every
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day Windows users are going through.
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I've been able to solve a lot of problems by having this profile of a user in my toolbox,
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you know, I guess the concept I'm giving is that there's the concept of switching hats
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and, you know, one of these hats is Linux user, one of them is a Mac user, one of them is a,
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you know, Chrome OS user, one of them is a Windows user and I'm able to switch hats frequently
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because I force myself to explore using these operating systems as an everyday tool.
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What I found is that using Windows to me is not the same as for most people and the reason
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why I say that because for most people, they are using Windows in the more dumb down sense,
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you know, they're just clicking through boxes and they're just accepting ULAS and just
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using the tool and that's it.
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They don't really have an understanding of the deeper nuances and some of the deeper
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things you can do inside of Windows.
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Alright, so in summary, the importance of being an everyday Windows user just allows me
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to focus on solving problems in different and unique ways using different tools, using
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tools that other people are using out there and the beautiful part is that I don't really
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lose touch in my Linux, in my Linux command line, I've got my, I have my Ubuntu shell here,
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I have a Cali Linux VM and these are all tools that just allow me to stay focused.
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Alright, so moving on to the next one, web stuff. Alright, there's an awesome website
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that I've discovered recently and it allows you to test and debug your RegX. This is called
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RegX101.com. What I find very helpful about this site is that as your, whatever RegX is
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that you're inputting into the site, you can put sample data there and it will also basically
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show you what the result of your RegX formula is. In addition to that, it will also provide
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some information about the RegX itself, what meaning, what different, what the different
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components of your RegX is doing and I find it to be extremely helpful if whether you're
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new or this is something, this is something that you're very accustomed to doing. It's
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just a very helpful website that allows you to test your RegX formulas against some sample
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data. The last thing that's extremely beneficial is that it allows you to share these
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RegX formulas with everyone using the results that, using the results from the test data.
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So, if you have, you know, a RegX value and some test data and you want to compare or
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accelerate or share this on some site, you can use this site to save, similar to paste
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bin or something of that nature, to share your RegX and the sample data and provide that
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as an example for others to, you know, either critique or, you know, to use in their projects.
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So, I find this to be a very helpful site, RegX101.com. All right, maps. In the U.S., if,
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I know GPS's and, you know, phone GPS's and open street map or Google maps and we have
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a lot of map tools available to us and all across the world. And these are all digital
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map tools that require some sort of network connection. Some, you know, may require you to
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download this information ahead of time before planning a hike or a trip or something like that.
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And one of the really good map resources that are out there are the USGS maps.
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What makes this a very unique site to download maps from is that you are able to download
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PDF versions of map sections that are one in 24,000 units or 7.5 minute degree maps. So,
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this is an awesome, awesome resource if you're into land navigation using a map, using a map
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ruler or map protractor and being able to navigate latitude and longitude, look positions
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using a quadrant-based map. I believe quadrant, I believe that's the correct tool or correct term.
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But anyway, a quadrangle, quadrangle-based map. These are all topo maps, so you're going to get
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elevations, you're going to get major rowways, you're going to get landmasses such as rivers and
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lakes and stuff like that. These are not going to be like flight maps where you're going to get
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airport data. And maybe in the next episode, I'll locate a resource that allows you to download
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those types of maps, especially if you're like a drone pilot or someone who's still going to go
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out there on a hiking trip or backpacking trip and want to know and you want to know where some of
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your some of the aerial maps that are available out there, because it's really helpful to know
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what were some of the air traffic. What are some aerial maps that pilots would use, because
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that could be an instrument or resource in a survival situation, especially when you're out there
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on your own hiking and wilderness. But I definitely recommend this. This is going to be on the USGS.
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You have to go to the store, the USGS store, and you know, you can purchase maps that are already
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printed on a piece of paper, or you can just download the maps yourselves as a PDF and print them
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on your own paper on a plotter or something like that. So I highly recommend it. And most of the maps
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that I've seen, they're about two, they're within two years, they're around one to two years old,
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which is great. It's no problem. But the biggest benefit out of this is that you're going to have
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the quadrangle, or your latin lungs are going to be painted or displayed on these maps, which will
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allow you to conduct a land navigation using a map protractor or map ruler. But you'll need a one
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and 24,000 scaled ruler. So you can't use like just if you use like a one and one thousand or
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use like a different, if you use military stuff, if you use a, if you use anything different,
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you won't get the accuracy that you're looking for when you're doing analog land navigation.
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So last website that I have for the web stuff is SDN information. So if you're starting out
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and software defined networking, I highly recommend that you take a look at this GitHub site that I
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have is called Awesome-SDN. And this website is a basically a repository or a source of a lot of
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different types of information regarding SDN. Now if you're just starting with SDN or you're
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already deploying this in production at a site in your job, this is still a great site.
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I use this for my northbound networks, which is in my Rubus switches that are SDN capable or
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use an open flow. If you're using other switches that have different network operating systems on
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there, this is still a great site to identify different types of controllers and libraries
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and resources to allow you to configure your SDN environment.
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The most important part here is that if you are not already, if you are in a network, if you work
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on network infrastructure or network automation or networks in general, you have to start thinking
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about network automation. You have to start thinking about how the network is going to deploy itself,
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how the networking can become more self-healing, how the information, like such as SDN SNMP traps and
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stuff like that, how those things can be more easily and automated, more easily communicated to
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network operators or network administrators or network engineers so that your environment can
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sustain network outages and network changes or protocol changes.
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If you're not looking into SDN or if you're not looking into network automation in general,
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such as using Ansible or maybe some proprietary level automation tool, you have to start looking
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into this stuff, you have to start looking into this stuff. SDN is just one component in my opinion
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of many tools available, one component of the many available tools out there. I guess that's
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the right thing to say. But definitely start looking at SDN. Check out northbound networks for
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their SDN devices. They got the cheapest switches you can purchase at 100 Meg and 1 Gig.
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You can find a couple of other devices out there for some of the more mainstream
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switching providers, but they get very expensive. The cheapest that you can find out there using
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a 10G port is probably going to be about 500 bucks. You can build your own, and this is going to
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segue into my firewall topic, but you can build your own for very inexpensive, sub-$200
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or even sub-$100 if you want to go bare bones. But yeah, I highly recommend looking at an open
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flow, open virtual switching, looking at network operating systems, and SDN controllers. These are
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all great things to check out. Also, you can also look at, there is also a way that you
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can virtualize an SDN environment. If you just want to test, you can create virtual switches.
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In that fashion, you can just test a SDN controller against the virtual switches and have virtual
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nodes tied to the virtual switches. That will allow you to test your SDN environment using
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just virtual resources, which is a very common tool, which is very common when you're using
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genosis. When using, what is this tool called? It's a genosis.
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So, the tool is called GNS3. GNS3 is your way of deploying an SDN environment
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without using any physical hardware. But anyway, moving on. One more thing to add to the SDN
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topic is zero tier. There's an awesome, this is an awesome UDP pinning SDN or SD1 tool.
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This is basically edge networking for your mobile devices and allows you to
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basically connect to other devices that you own and you control. They have a virtual switch
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on the actual device, which connects back and the controller will communicate to those devices
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how to connect to the other devices in your environment, whether that's going to be
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your firewall back at home or another mobile device in another place and on Earth.
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And that's zero tier. I have those in the show notes. Home hacks.
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All right, I'll only have one here and this is a home phone. If you are looking for a home phone
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and you already have a Google voice number, then I highly recommend getting yourself an OB200
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from OBTALK. And this will allow you to basically deploy a home landline phone system over a
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SIP, a SIP telephone or VoIP telephone adapter, which will allow you to connect your Google voice
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number as a SIP and other SIP resources as well. So if you want 911, you can pay for that per month
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and you'll get 911 service. Or if you just want a free home phone, you just use your Google voice,
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connect that to your OBTALK system, your OB200. And from there, you'll be good to go. You'll be
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able to reach your home phone from any other phone and you'll have a home phone number, which is a
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fantastic, a fantastic solution, especially if you're not interested in purchasing or paying for
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a VoIP service through your internet service provider. So it's free. The service is free,
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which is using Google voice. The device is about 50 bucks, I believe. I can't recall, but I'll have
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a link to it in the show notes and fantastic tool. Fantastic tool. All right.
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All right. Last one is firewalls. Okay. So in the past year and a half, I've been using ubiquity as
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my primary network environment. And it's been a pretty good and useful tool. What I like about
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ubiquity is that you have basically a controller that will send the configurations over to the
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firewall, to the switch, to your wireless devices. And it's very useful. Very useful because you're
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just using one web interface to control your entire network environment. Similar to what an
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SDN environment is. And I think ubiquity, their sales team classifies this as an SDN tool,
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or SDN network tool. But one thing I've discovered is that using the, using the, using the
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unified secured gateway, the three-port device, which is about 100 bucks US. It's a decent device
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if you're at a 50 megabits to 100 megabits, when uplink. But if you have a one gigabit,
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when uplink, this device is completely useless for that type of network connectivity. And the
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reason why I say that is because if you were to enable the IPS and the IDS and all the other
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features that are tied to this device, you will be, you will have issues with your firewall
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capabilities. And what I mean by that is, for example, let's say you have a one gigabit
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upwind uplink. And you're going from your modem to your firewall at one gigabit connectivity.
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And then you're going from your firewall to your LAN at one gigabit connectivity.
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Now, the problem with all this is that you will not have end-to-end one gigabit throughput.
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The reason behind that is because the ASIC inside of the firewall, you know, heating,
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the features or the capabilities of the firewall, the bus, all that has, all that is going to have a
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very important part in how your firewall performs when you start enabling these additional features.
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So, one of the problems with the Unified Secure Gateway, the three-port one is, or USG3,
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is that if you were to enable IPS, IDS, and try to push one gigabit where the traffic
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throughout your household up to the when, your firewall is going to reach a limitation.
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And for example, let's say we have about, you know, let's say we have about one million packets per
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second that we want to transmit over our firewall. If we were to do the math, and let's just cut
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that in half. Let's say 500,000 packets per second. And let's say each packet is 100 bytes.
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When you do the math on this, what you end up, what ends up happening is that you end up with
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approximately 400 megabits per second and throughput. So, think about that. If your firewall
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has needs the capability of transmitting one 500,000 packets per second just to get 400 megabits
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per second. The ASIC or the CPU in that firewall has to be beefy enough to support that capability.
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And this is a lot of people have this problem when they're using these
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fanless firewall solutions is that the CPU just can't handle one million packets per second.
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And one million packets per second is more or less the equivalent of getting 800 to 900 megabits
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per second in firewall throughput. So, and we're just talking firewalls. We're not talking
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IPS IDS. Once you start enabling IPS IDS, your CPU is working harder and it may throttle down
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that your traffic to 50 megs per second. So, you know, think about that. You've got a one gigabit
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when uplink that can only transmit at 50 megabits per second over your firewall. And, you know,
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that's it. You're done. You're not going to be able to get your 1080p. You're not going to be able
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to gain. You're not going to be able to do uploads or anything like that. You are limited to that
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50 megabits per second with the IPS enabled and firewall capabilities enabled. So,
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so the best alternative would be to purchase dedicated hardware. And what I mean by that is
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you could go with the ubiquity XG, which is, you know, a 10G capable and one million packets per
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second capable. You know, you'll get the full throughput out of the device. But you're paying
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over a thousand US dollars for that. That is a solution that is not good or not a good option for
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a hobbyist or a home network hobbyist or someone with just a simple home network.
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And if you want to, if you want to spend and save, if you want to save some cash and you want
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to still get that one over one million packets per second throughput and have all the
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capabilities of using IPS, IDS, VPN, you know, IPsec, whatever, whatever jargon you want to throw in
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there, whatever special words you want to throw in, you'll get the capability if you bought dedicated
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hardware. So a small form factor workstation like an AP HPZ 240. That's going to allow you to
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deploy as, you know, a four core 8 threads beyond processor 32 gigabits of RAM to PCIe by 16 lanes
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using by eight with a by with either by 16 or by eight connectivity. And with just that alone,
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you'll be able to well surpass the one million packets per second connectivity by having a one gig
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a bit connection on board and then deploying a, you know, a low, low profile two port 10 gigabit
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SFP plus Nick on there. That's it. You're you will you will have the ability to
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to do a lot more than you could with, you know, a usg3 and you would have saved almost about five even
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seven hundred dollars. Then if you by opting out of purchasing an xg or, you know, a high end
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dedicated hardware. And so so the most important part about this is the SFF option a small four
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factor option. You want something that's small that's going to live inside of a network closet
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or someplace where he is going to, you know, penetrate it 24 by seven. You want this thing to be
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able to stay cool on its own, have some fans running on it. You want this to have the ability to
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run the Z on processor with Z on processors. You have low clock rates, you know, 2.3 to 0.0 to
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maybe even 3.0 if you spend some big dollars on there on the CPU. But at least you get four
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cores eight threads out of the thing most of the time. You can still you could even go cheaper and go
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core i3, core i4, core i5, core i7. And these are all these are all going to be, you know,
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four generation IV bridge processors. So those things are out there for less than a hundred bucks
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sometimes. With 32 gigs of 32 gigabytes of RAM, you got plenty of RAM to do to do whatever you
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want with this dedicated firewall, dedicated firewall hardware. And you have at least four slots
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to to to load up a three and a half inch drives. If you want, you could even you can even purchase
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PCIe adapters that allow you to plug in a NVME drive, which will be fantastic solution to speed up
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your your storage. And in the end, you have a dedicated system that is for your firewall that
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has 10G connectivity or even, you know, four by you can even deploy, you know, multiple one gig
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nicks, whatever whatever your flavor of connectivity you want, you can deploy here. And in the end,
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you can have well past the one million packets per second, you can enable almost all the features
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available on pfcent or so foes xg. And this will be a a very great piece of equipment to have
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on your network and to allow for you to freely do whatever you want by utilizing that one gig
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|
a bit whine up link. So to circle is all around with the intro and with my windows discussion.
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When I one thing that I have done is that I've actually migrated from a dedicated firewall
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system to a virtualized firewall system. And what I've done is a small I've taken a small form
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factor PC, you know, like an HPZ 240, you know, paid, you know, 150 bucks for the thing or whatever it
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was on eBay at the time. Loaded up some RAM, loaded up a decent Z on CPU, put a hard drive in
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there and installed some and installed a hypervisor. After I installed a hypervisor, from there,
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I was able to deploy firewalls as as VMs. And by deploying the firewall as a VM, I do lose some
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performance, but not nothing that I'm going to notice with my one gig a bit whine up link.
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|
And what I've gained out of all this is the freedom to run multiple firewall operating systems
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|
on the same dedicated hardware. And I've been able to switch between firewalls. I've been able to
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load balance between firewalls. I've been able to, you know, do performance tests against firewalls,
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|
you know, do comparison tests, you know, deploy PF cents as a VM here. And, you know,
|
|
so far as XG on another VM here. And just swing the whine up link over virtually using the
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virtual switch and the hypervisor. And boom, I'm now in seconds, I'm connected to a PF
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|
sense box with all my brand new, you know, security policy or firewall policies. And oops,
|
|
looks like I messed something up, swing it back. And boom, I'm back on my SOFO's XG running my network.
|
|
So by virtualizing, by virtualizing the firewall and treating it as a service to my environment
|
|
and removing it as a dedicated operating system, I've been able to leverage this small form
|
|
factor system to not only do firewall testing, but to do all sorts of other testing. And,
|
|
and I found that to be a huge benefit in my environment. Okay. Well, I'm going to post this up now
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in Audacity, clean it up, add some intros and outros to it. But I do encourage everyone to
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|
to continue uploading, continue discussing what, you know, what you're doing and what you're
|
|
getting yourself into. And, and, you know, I hope this was of some help. I hope this was some useful
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information that different people can, can take with them and use for whatever the projects they
|
|
have planned. I appreciate your time listening. You all have a great one. And until next time,
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|
I hope it's not going to be 2000 days later, but I'll try to upload something again soon.
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Until next time, everybody, take care and have a good one.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio as Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
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