"I’m going to make it so people can go, if you’re convicted of a drug offense, or if you have a drug problem, you can go to one of these places for free."
Doesn't exactly sound like forced labour to me.
Sorry about my confused rambling 😅
Yes, the example was to demonstrate the difference between subnetting and vlan. Albeit simplified. What you said is right.
The poster i was responding to equated subnetting to vlans. I might have misunderstood what they meant though. It sounded like they wanted to use the same subnet per vlan, which wont work if you want them routed in the same gateway.
Reading it again they make it sound like you can't subnet all of these networks on a switch without vlan, which you definitely can.
I could for example connect 4 different devices on the subnet 192
168.10.x/24 and have them reach each other. I could also connect 4 more devices in the same switch but on a different network 192.168.20.x/24 and it would work.
You can't use the same subnet on different vlans if you ever intend for both of them to reach the internet.
In that case you'd need a second router which just defeats the purpose
I could give you an example.
In my kitchen we have a faucet with a detachable aerator. We detach it when we want to use a attachment for a garden hose.
When attaching the aerator or the garden hose attachment, the threads are reversed. I might be wrong, but two opposing threads shouldn't be able to screw into one another right?
I don't think we have a Swedish one. But we call clockwise "medsols" and counterclockwise "motsols". Meaning "with the sun" or "against the sun"
Does everyone have reversed threads on plumbing or is that a Nordic/Swedish thing? All plumbing has the reversed rule, left tightens and right loosens.
It has to do with link priority on the server. You'd imagine that a server that receives a packet that has a return address on the same subnet as it self logically would use that interface instead.
A similar thing happens in switches. For example if you have two vlans on a switch and both vlans have an ip assigned, connect a computer to one of the vlans. You will only be able to reach the switch on the non-routed connection. Even if you also are allowed to reach the second vlan through a router/Firewall.
My guess is that the server receives the packet from the client with src .11.101 dst .10.102 and tries to respond over the interface that has .11.102 assigned.
The client expects a response from src .10.102 and drops the packet.
But I would turn on a packet sniffer in the gateway to see if the returning traffic even passes the Firewall in scenario 1.
"mainstream media" - you mean like this echo chamber?
I literally never would have heard of this nonsense if if wasn't for Lemmy. So yes, i would gladly have ignored the stupidity for what it is, stupid.
Acknowledge the stupidity of it and move on. I'd much rather talk about the thousands of good things that the Olympics bring out. Like her winning after likely practicing her fucking ass off and putting life on hold for this one dream.
10 and 11 are waaaaaaaay better than 8. But meme is meme.