• surfrock66@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    FYI, the kiwix foundation makes offline versions of wikimedia resources (though at pretty wide intervals, depending on the site, annually) which you can download via torrent and browse with a ZIM viewer. I use this as an offline resource on my home LAN, and have used other kiwix downloaded resources to train a local LLM without spamming the real internet: https://library.kiwix.org/

    • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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      9 hours ago

      Download a little offline Wiki for rainy days folks!

      I take connectivity for granted but shouldn’t. Batteries charged, books on the shelf, offline games and media stored locally…

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          What kind of shitty-ass dorm relies on cellular connections? When I was in college, we had wired ethernet in the dorms and then wifi on top of that. Piracy was huge, in part because it was a lot of folks’ first opportunity to have a fast connection, LOL.

          (Admittedly, that was at a research university that had been sitting directly on internet backbone since the NSFNET days, but still…!)

          • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            Ah good old dorms. My first t3 line. So much media downloaded, uh, with the express written consent of the license holders I swear

          • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)@lemmy.sdf.org
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            7 hours ago

            We have that available, I just use mobile data because I disagree with their ToS.
            The ToS is so restrictive that you basically immediately break it after connecting a device. I was told that, of course, they don’t really care.
            Except - there is a point stating the provider has the right to access your computer if there is a suspicion of ToS violation. Considering the network here is a student-run organization, that could easily be exploited if you piss off someone.
            Maybe I am just paranoid, but no thanks.

            Otherwise, from talking with them, most dorms have 1Gbit, some have 2.5Gbit, and all share a 40Gbit link which could apparently do 100Gbit (I think), but it’s capped due to licensing.
            They leverage national academic network.
            Oh, and they also got a class B subnet back when everyone was sure there’s just way too many IPv4s, so NAT isn’t being used here.