Great timing on this article. I have a rpi4 and a pi cam v2 which I want to have some fun with and was in need of inspiration. I am currently using it as a security camera while I am away on holiday but wish to have a play both with slow motion video and perhaps some object detection using opencv.
The latter I have already tried but all the articles I found seem out of date so I will need to spend some more time on.
In NZ some ISPs use cg-nat meaning that you will have many people under one public IPv4 address. Going by this logic you could ban a whole ISP in one go.
Hey man, I'm a Kiwi as well and have been considering an arrangement like this as I'd like my next job to be full remote and unfortunately this hasn't yet been a thing in NZ (Don't see many full remote jobs on Seek)
From my experience, the problem is the lamination of the NZ ones, causing refraction and making it hard to scan. I find that even at the right distance I have to move my phone left and right until the light isn't reflecting
The QLD ones suffer the same issue. I imagine not as bad. But anecdotally the plain paper codes scan as fast as you want. The laminated ones you have to move the camera about to make sure there is no glare interfering with the image
I've had a bit of a play with Singularity containers and thought they were quite cool. Popular in the science circles but not so much anywhere else. I wonder why.
A bit more manual, but I've been saving webpages I like in Obsidian.
First, click the reader view in Firefox, then select all, then paste it into a new Obsidian page. It's really good at keeping a nice formatting and importing pictures etc.
You can then export the result to PDF if so desired.