Best products from r/softwaregore

We found 20 comments on r/softwaregore discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 75 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

Top comments mentioning products on r/softwaregore:

u/MoistSquid · 15 pointsr/softwaregore

Not OP, but we've deployed Ubiquiti products in a few of our enterprise customers and it is running great. I am not sure how much you already know about networking, but I'll explain for anyone else reading.

First, some background to fully understand what it is you are trying to do. The thing that most consumers call "routers" are really three things: a router, a switch, and an access point. TLDR the router portion is the thing that actually moves traffic between machines, the switch extends how many physical ethernet ports you have, and the access point gives you wifi.

The Ubiquiti Access Points (UAP) are just access points. You will still need a router to route traffic, and your consumer one will work just fine for most people. If you are looking to get something more SOHO, Ubiquiti also makes their own router/firewall (check out USG, or ideally EdgeRouter). For all intents and purposes, it is a pretty good idea to separate the roles of your network (physical appliances for the router, firewall, wireless, etc...), and you can have as many UAP's as you'd like for wireless. The UAP's run off of Ubiquiti's 24V Power-over-Ethernet (POE), which can be provided via a POE injector or with a Ubiquiti Switch (either Unifi or EdgeMax). So for a basic network, you'll disable the wireless functionality on your consumer router, and plug a UAP into a port (obviously you'll need to pass it through the POE injector first). Rinse and repeat for however many UAP's you want, maybe another one on the other side of the house for example.

The UAP is pretty useless on its own, though. It needs a piece of software called the Unifi Controller. The software is free, and you can run it on Windows, Linux, or with Ubiquiti's appliance called the Cloud Key. Within Unifi Controller, you'll setup the UAP's; e.g. setting the visible wifi name (SSID), security, channels, etc... It isn't too complicated, the interface is really intutive and anyone who is even slightly technical could figure it out. The controller also serves another really important feature, which is zero-handoff. As long as the controller is running, your device will connect to the access point with the best signal. This is the seamless switching you asked about.

Ubiquiti also is focused on mesh networking, although we are generally pretty against that for businesses for reliability reasons. Of course, the exception to that is Cisco Meraki, which is a hybrid that will self-heal. If you lie and say you are an IT professional, you can get a free Meraki with a 3 year license. Just make sure that you follow the rules.

As a note, I would stick to the UAP AC's. They are the newer version and run great. For consumers, the UAP-AC-LITE is going to work fine. Obviously there is more to networking and wireless solutions than what I went over here, but this is the general gist of it.

u/JTadaki · 2 pointsr/softwaregore

四/よん/yon = 4
Try https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/imiwa/id288499125?mt=8 if you have iOS. I'm not sure if Imiwa is on Android, this app serves as a dictionary.

Also checkout the 1st Genki textbook and workbook, they are used by schools all over the US and my professor teaches from it daily.

Textbook: GENKI I: An Integrated Course in Elementary Japanese (English and Japanese Edition) https://www.amazon.com/dp/4789014401/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_gxGPCbTNRWJB9

Workbook: Genki: An Integrated Course in Elementary Japanese Workbook I [Second Edition] (Japanese Edition) (Japanese and English Edition) https://www.amazon.com/dp/478901441X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_GxGPCbQEZBF16

I started with Duolingo as well and it wasn't a great start. These books will help further your Japanese learning. I've been studying for two years starting in August, they really work.

r/learnjapanese is also a great place to check for viable resources besides the ones I mentioned.
Good luck! 頑張って!

u/King_Tamino · 4 pointsr/softwaregore

Thanks, I digged a bit on Amazon. The linked one is the later model of the one I own.
Amazon names the one you linked as newer model, when I open up "my orders" and check it up.

However, I own mine since ~ 2010 and I'm pretty confident, the "gore" shown by OP can be "reproduced" on mine.

I'm pinning this thread and can hopefully upload a short clip today evening (about 10 hours ... currently at work and have a bit stuff to do afterwards)

u/Ragingman2 · 3 pointsr/softwaregore

Alternative take using the best storage density currently available (http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Ultra-MicroSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B00IIJ6W4S)

1 TB = 1024 GB (Bytes are usually grouped into sets of 2^10 or 1024 rather than the sets of 1000 implied by SI units) thus 8,388,608 TB = 8,589,934,592 GB

According to wikipedia a micro SD card is 15.0×11.0×1.0 mm or 1.65 10^-7 cubic meters

1.65
10^-7 cubic meters / 128 GB = 1.29 10 ^ -9 Cubic meters / Gigabyte

1.29
10 ^ -9 Cubic meters / Gigabyte * 8,589,934,592 Gigabytes = a measly 11.07 cubic meters to store all that data

However, high storage density comes with a steep price. Those 67,108,864 SD cards are going to cost a whopping $7,180,648,448 (7 billion dollars).

u/_Ganon · 1 pointr/softwaregore

You can probably find more information online, but...

Parts used:

  • GTX 980
  • Akitio Thunder2
  • PCIe Riser Cable
  • Dell Power Adapter
  • Modded power cable
  • Thunderbolt Cable (ships with Akitio)
  • Thunderbolt2 capable laptop (no reason to use this with desktop)

    Once everything's put together, connects to your laptop via Thunderbolt cable. If you've built a desktop computer before, you'll easily be able to figure out how to put this together. If you haven't, I don't recommend attempting this.
u/electromage · 4 pointsr/softwaregore

Man you guys and your cheap-ass cables.. I only trust my computers with the best.

u/JASH_DOADELESS_ · 3 pointsr/softwaregore

I bought one of these chairs from Amazon for a lot cheaper. Good chair though

u/tiedyedschwifty · 1 pointr/softwaregore

Seems like a dodgy demographic to be messing with like this amazon.

Also, I tried to get the kindle version of these awesome pants, but it was just some book about drugs...

https://www.amazon.com/Drugs-Without-Hot-David-Nutt/dp/1906860165/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=drugs+without+the+hot+air&qid=1565123396&s=digital-text&sr=1-1-catcorr


Edit: Missing word re-assimilated.