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  • Did you know... One man has saved more than 200 people from suicide.

    It's a sad fact the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco is a site where many suicides take place. However, one California Highway Patrol officer has done more to combat this problem than any other individual. Officer Kevin Briggs, who battles depression himself, has personally talked more than 200 people down from the proverbial ledge throughout his career. After retiring in 2013, Briggs wrote a book called Guardian of the Golden Gate and now goes on speaking tours to encourage public discussion of suicide and mental illness.

  • Did you know... Our European ancestors were cannibals.

    In 16th and 17th century Europe, cannibalism was actually a fairly common practice, and it was all for medical purposes. The practice seems to have started because Egyptian mummies were thought to have magical curative properties—so they were ground up and put in many remedies.

    As the idea evolved, human bone, blood, and fat were all used in medical concoctions. Got a headache? Crush a skull and make it into tea! While medical cannibalism has fallen out of favor, modern medicine still sometimes uses one human body to heal another in the form of blood donations, organ transplants, and skin grafts.

  • Did you know...Redheads aren't actually going extinct.

    Periodically, a rumor starts on the internet that says natural redheads will become extinct by the year 2060. Lucky for gingers everywhere, this is a myth. It's true that the gene that causes red hair is recessive, meaning that both parents must have it for their child to have red hair. However, even non-redheads can carry the red hair gene, and it can pop up unexpectedly in generations down the line.

  • Did you know... Pro baseball once had women players.

    While there are currently no female players in Major League Baseball, there have been plenty of women in professional men's leagues. The first was Lizzy Arlington, who pitched during the ninth inning for the Reading Coal Heavers in 1898 and won her team the game. A little over 30 years later, an African-American woman, Jackie Mitchell, pitched against the Yankees during an exhibition game, striking out both Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. What's more impressive: Mitchell was 17 years old at the time.

  • Did you know... Koalas have fingerprints.

    Chimpanzees and gorillas have human-like fingerprints and so do koalas. In fact, koala prints are very similar to human fingerprints, even to expert crime scene investigators. As of yet, no koalas have framed humans for their crimes, but now we know it's not impossible…

  • Did you know... Humans are just one of the estimated 8.7 million species on Earth.

    Human beings may dominate the planet with our sprawling cities and far-reaching technology, but we are, in fact, just one species among some 8.7 million that live together on planet Earth. One 2011 study published in the journal PLoS Biology estimated that "the various forms of life on the planet included 7.8 million species of animals, 298,000 species of plants, 611,000 species of mushrooms, mold and other fungi, 36,400 species of protozoa, and 27,500 species of algae or chromists." And it's worth noting that the researchers did not venture to put an estimate on the number of bacteria.

  • Did you know... Riding a roller coaster could help you pass a kidney stone.

    After multiple people reported they had passed a kidney stone while riding Walt Disney World's Big Thunder Mountain Railroad ride, a research team from Michigan State University decided to investigate the phenomena in 2016. They conducted tests with a model kidney and found that there was a 64 percent kidney stone pass rate for those seated in the rear of the Thunder Mountain ride. That number was just 16 percent for those seated in the front.

  • Did you know... Dinosaurs lived on every continent.

    Back in their day, dinosaurs lived on every continent on Earth, including Antarctica. The reason we only find their bones in certain places, though, is that weather and soil conditions in those places were just right for the bones to be fossilized. Scientists also speculate that there may be many smaller-sized dinosaurs that we know nothing about because their bones were too small to fossilize well.

  • Did you know... Bee hummingbirds are so small they get mistaken for insects.

    Hummingbirds are known for being itty-bitty creatures, but Bee Hummingbirds are the teeniest versions of these shockingly tiny flyers. They're actually the smallest bird in the world. They are so minuscule that they are sometimes mistaken for insects (which explains their name), according to the National Audobon Society. The birds are just two and a quarter inches long and weigh less than a dime.

  • Did you know... Sea lions can dance to a beat.

    There are only two mammals on Earth with the proven ability to move their bodies in time with an external beat: humans (though not all humans, to be fair) and sea lions. When researchers at the University of Santa Cruz rescued a stranded sea lion in 2013, they found that she was very smart, and she was even able to learn how to dance. Though parrots can also keep a rhythm, it was previously thought that only animals capable of complex vocal learning could do this.

  • I have found a use for that 512 MB VPS I won earlier...running an IRC bouncer on it, lol. So now I have one VPS running wireguard (the one with the highest amount of bandwidth), one running the bouncer, two running sites, and one running a seedbox. Need more ideas or I'll have to start cancelling some!

  • Did you know... The famed "Typhoid Mary" infected more than 50 people by cooking for them.

    "Typhoid Mary" was a real historical person who became notorious in the early 1900s. She was an Irish woman named Mary Mallon who immigrated to the United States in the 1880s. Though she had no symptoms of typhoid fever, she carried the bacteria in her blood and could pass it on to other people. Because no doctor could convince her that this was true and she didn't feel sick, she insisted on working as a cook. During her career, she infected at least 51 people, three of whom died, before she was isolated in enforced quarantine for the last decades of her life.

  • Did you know... The legend of the Loch Ness Monster goes back nearly 1,500 years.

    There's a tale written in the year 565 A.D. that speaks of an Irish monk traveling through Scotland. While there, Saint Columba heard stories of a "water beast" that attacked and killed the local people when they went in the river. Wanting to help, the monk used his friend as bait to lure the beast into sight, at which point Columba commanded it to "go no further," and the creature stopped and swam back upstream. That river is now known in Scotland as the River Ness, which flows out from the famous Loch Ness.

  • Did you know... Nutmeg can be fatally poisonous.

    A little dash of nutmeg in a pumpkin pie or on your egg nog can give it some extra flavor and a lovely, spicy scent. Too much nutmeg, however, can be toxic. Two to three teaspoons of raw nutmeg can induce hallucinations, convulsions, pain, nausea, and paranoia that can last for several days. Actual fatalities are rare, but they have happened.

  • Did you know... The first iPhone wasn't made by Apple.

    The first mobile device to be called an "iPhone" was made by Cisco, not Apple. It allowed the user to use the voice functions of Skype without a computer. Apple announced its own product just 22 days later, and Cisco sued for trademark infringement. The lawsuit was ultimately settled out of court and both companies were allowed to keep using the name. However, you've probably never heard of the Cisco iPhone.

  • @SocksAreComfortable said:
    I have found a use for that 512 MB VPS I won earlier...running an IRC bouncer on it, lol. So now I have one VPS running wireguard (the one with the highest amount of bandwidth), one running the bouncer, two running sites, and one running a seedbox. Need more ideas or I'll have to start cancelling some!

    Websites ?

  • @SocksAreComfortable said:
    I have found a use for that 512 MB VPS I won earlier...running an IRC bouncer on it, lol. So now I have one VPS running wireguard (the one with the highest amount of bandwidth), one running the bouncer, two running sites, and one running a seedbox. Need more ideas or I'll have to start cancelling some!

    Two for jump boxs to use to get into the other VMs so your firewall only has to be open to two IPs on ssh port?

  • Did you know... There's a country where twins are most likely to be born.

    Benin, a country in central Africa, is notable for having the highest birth rate of twins in the world. While the world average is just 13 twins per 1,000 births, Benin more than doubles that rate, at nearly 30 twins per 1,000 births. There's no single factor that causes this, but genetics, diet, and even the mother's height are thought to play a role.

  • Did you know...The Comic Sans font came from an actual comic book.

    Most adults nowadays who know anything about graphic design steer away from using the Comic Sans font in formal documents. The font was designed by Vincent Connare, who drew direct inspiration from his favorite comic books, including Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' celebrated Watchmen series.

  • Did you know... For 100 years, maps have shown an island that doesn't exist.

    Almost nothing is known about Sandy Island, a land mass about the size of Manhattan in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Australia. Supposedly, explorer James Cook discovered it in 1774, and it began appearing on nautical maps in 1908. It wasn't until 2012, when a team of Australian scientists set out to survey the island, that they discovered there was no island there at all. The scientists guessed that Cook may have in fact spotted a "pumice raft" of floating volcanic stone and gas. The Sydney Morning Herald even published an obituary for Sandy Island.

  • Did you know... Babies are physical anomalies.

    Babies, particularly newborns, are surprisingly different from the children they'll grow up to be. When they're born, their heads account for a quarter of their full body weight, and the size of their brains will double in the first year of life. Babies have 300 bones and around 10,000 tastebuds all over their mouth. Some of the bones will fuse as they age (into 206, as an adult), but the tastebuds not on the tongue will eventually vanish.

  • Did you know... The man who wrote Dracula never visited Transylvania.

    Bram Stoker was an Irish author who is now best remembered for his gothic horror novel Dracula. Partially set in Transylvania, a mountainous region in central Romania, the story cemented the legend of the vampire in mainstream European and American culture. Despite Stoker's many world travels, he never visited Eastern Europe—and, by virtue, Transylvania—at all.

  • Did you know... A tick bite can make you allergic to red meat.

    Plenty of people have food allergies, but few are the result of an insect bite. In a strange and growing trend, some people who get bitten by the Lone Star tick can develop a sudden allergy to red meat. Beef, lamb, and pork (which are technically classified as red meat) can make people with this allergy experience headaches, sneezing, a runny nose, and nausea. In severe cases, it can cause the person to be unable to breathe. For some sufferers, the allergy fades over time, but for others, it's permanent.

  • Did you know... Harriet Tubman was even more heroic than you thought.

    You probably know that Harriet Tubman was a former slave who became a political activist for the abolition movement. But in addition to smuggling escaped slaves through the Underground Railroad, during the Civil War she was the first woman to lead an armed assault. She planned and executed a number of raids and was known to carry a revolver for personal protection.

  • Did you know... Tornadoes can cause "fish rain."

    Tornadoes can develop over water just as well as they can over land. When they do, they're called "waterspouts," and they suck up large amounts of lake or sea water—as well as whatever's swimming in that water. If the waterspout travels on to the land and the winds decrease, there's nowhere for those fish to go but down. As far as we know, there's no tornado powerful enough to pick up sharks, but a fish-nado is entirely possible.

  • @FrankZ said:

    @SocksAreComfortable said:
    I have found a use for that 512 MB VPS I won earlier...running an IRC bouncer on it, lol. So now I have one VPS running wireguard (the one with the highest amount of bandwidth), one running the bouncer, two running sites, and one running a seedbox. Need more ideas or I'll have to start cancelling some!

    Websites ?

    Two running those already! And honestly those sites might as well be idling VPS for all the traffic they get, 99% of which is spiders.

  • Did you know... Napoleon was once attacked by thousands of rabbits.

    Napoleon Bonaparte was once one of the most powerful men in Europe, but he suffered an ignominious defeat at the hands (or paws) of rabbits. After a military victory, Napoleon's chief of staff organized a rabbit hunt to celebrate. Thousands of rabbits were brought in to be set loose, but instead of hopping away when the cages were opened, they turned to attack, swarming the partygoers. After trying and failing to shoo them away, the great Emperor Napoleon ran for the safety of his carriage.

  • @FrankZ said:

    @SocksAreComfortable said:
    I have found a use for that 512 MB VPS I won earlier...running an IRC bouncer on it, lol. So now I have one VPS running wireguard (the one with the highest amount of bandwidth), one running the bouncer, two running sites, and one running a seedbox. Need more ideas or I'll have to start cancelling some!

    Two for jump boxs to use to get into the other VMs so your firewall only has to be open to two IPs on ssh port?

    Hmm, interesting idea. Would it work to make one, a more powerful one presumably, a central resource VPS for something or other? I know there are uptime kuma and other monitoring things you can install, though I haven't used any myself.

  • FrankZFrankZ Barred
    edited January 2023

    @SocksAreComfortable said:

    @FrankZ said:

    @SocksAreComfortable said:
    I have found a use for that 512 MB VPS I won earlier...running an IRC bouncer on it, lol. So now I have one VPS running wireguard (the one with the highest amount of bandwidth), one running the bouncer, two running sites, and one running a seedbox. Need more ideas or I'll have to start cancelling some!

    Websites ?

    Two running those already! And honestly those sites might as well be idling VPS for all the traffic they get, 99% of which is spiders.

    What subject are the websites about ?

  • @SocksAreComfortable said:

    @FrankZ said:

    @SocksAreComfortable said:
    I have found a use for that 512 MB VPS I won earlier...running an IRC bouncer on it, lol. So now I have one VPS running wireguard (the one with the highest amount of bandwidth), one running the bouncer, two running sites, and one running a seedbox. Need more ideas or I'll have to start cancelling some!

    Two for jump boxs to use to get into the other VMs so your firewall only has to be open to two IPs on ssh port?

    Hmm, interesting idea. Would it work to make one, a more powerful one presumably, a central resource VPS for something or other? I know there are uptime kuma and other monitoring things you can install, though I haven't used any myself.

    Sure you just do not normally want the jump boxes to run services that are normally open to the world. Anything that you would limit via firewall to a few IPs would be fine and not be likely to compromise the jump box aspect of limiting access to your other servers.

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