Do you have separate 2.4GHz and 5GHz SSIDs? If not, you should try that. 80mbps to 5mbps through 4 sheets of drywall is a pretty steep drop for 2.4GHz, and 80mbps is a pretty low throughput for 5GHz AC1300, which your APs support. Are both APs wired? Try disconnecting one and doing speed/signal strength testing in all rooms, then do the same with the other AP in its location. If there is a huge difference, try switching the AP locations. Also, it may be worth checking whether the APs are negotiating a gigabit wired connection to your switch/router.
Which 2 APs? Have you mapped signal strength across rooms? How many clients? How many other wireless networks sharing a channel with you? 2.4GHz or 5GHz? What are your walls made of?
I would argue that as a proportion of the total build cost, the difference in cost between air coolers is fairly negligible, and as one of the few moving parts in the build, the reliability of the fan on the cooler should be a priority. I don't think a single other manufacturer has a demonstrated record of fan reliability and longevity that comes close to Noctua.
4 sticks will still run in dual channel mode and it will add complexity. Depending on the motherboard and memory kit, there might a slight boost in performance, but there is more likely going to be a performance hit due to the added complexity. Since this person is building from scratch, and a two stick kit tends to cost the same as a four stick kit, it makes more sense to go with a two stick kit.
Use pcpartpicker.com to build your system to help with compatibility.
Right now you either want a Ryzen 5800X3D or 7800X3D CPU depending on your budget.
For the 5800X3D, you'll want a DDR4 3600MHz dual channel kit for best RAM performance unless you want to overclock the infinity fabric. For the 7800X3D, 6000MHz DDR5. For either, you'll want a set of two sticks, not four. There are more specs for RAM that you can dig into and tune, but getting a kit with good reviews for a good price at these clock speeds will be enough.
For CPU cooler, the Noctua NHD15 is pretty much the best.
For SSDs, if your budget and motherboard allows it, get a PCIe gen 5 NVMe drive, but a PCIe gen 4 drive will probably be fast enough. Go with Samsung, if you can.
For power supply, get something with good reviews with 80+ Platinum or Titanium that can handle your load, and you'll probably be solid.
For GPU, go with a 7900XT or 6950XT if you can find one substantially cheaper.
For motherboard, if you go with the 5800X3D, the ASRock X570 Phantom Gaming motherboard is $110 on Amazon right now, and when I got it a couple months ago, the version I got had a recent enough bios revision to "just work" with the 5800X3D, so you shouldn't need an older CPU to update it like you used to. At this price, this board is a steal. For the 7800X3D, get something with good reviews that you can afford.
This is the way. ddclient can work with lots of DNS providers that have APIs https://ddclient.net/protocols.html, but Cloudflare has a lot of advantages.
The idea that it shares the same features as anything else we consider "property" is the problem, so why call it property? The only thing that one can "own" in this regime is the license itself, and that doesn't go away just because someone violates its terms.
Intellectual property is an umbrella term for copyright, patents, and trademarks used to make it sound like "property" is "stolen" when licensing agreements are violated.
"Intellectual property" as a concept is designed to trick people into thinking copyright, trademark, and patent infringement are equivalent to theft. It's an incorrect and pernicious use of the word "theft".
Related: JerryRigEverything just came out with a video about this and titled "I got robbed" and called it theft a bunch of times. This is copyright infringement, maybe trademark infringement, but not "theft" or "robbery". No property or money was taken from any party such that they no longer have access to it. It's important to be accurate about this.
Edit:
Here is a list of all the media I've found surrounding this that falsely claims stealing, theft or robbery:
Do you have a transcript, so I don't have to watch a video to look for errors?
As an author on a few papers, I think this is not a place where LLMs will really shine. They may be fine to use by a subject matter expert for a first pass, but would likely produce inaccurate statements. Scientific papers have very specific and niche language, with lots of numbers attached. LLMs are not trained to handle this kind of a situation well.
There are lots of questions to answer before any recommendation could make sense. How many users? 720p, 1080p, or 4k content? Transcoding? Remote streaming or local only? WAN bandwidth? How much storage? Power requirements? Is prebuilt a requirement? Budget? And probably more.
Plex and Jellyfin are the two main servers the handle this kind of thing. Both have benefits, but Plex hides some features behind a paywall ans Jellyfin is FOSS.
I believe their point here was that your claim that "open source" is self explanatory is wrong. You've imprinted your definition onto it and called it "common sense" without thinking further about how how nebulous it is without extra context. This is then driven home by your lack of understanding on the AA discussion.
So did you: The Day Before