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Изходен канал @clockstackwheels · Post #111 · 14.12

Поставил себе дома NAS-хранилище Synology DS220+, и весьма кайфую от его удобства. Вообще, изначально я был настроен скептически к таким устройствам. Хранить много данных у себя дома мне казалось ненадёжным: сколько бы вы RAID-массивов не ставили, условный пожар в доме уничтожает весь ваш фотоархив. Но даже если хочешь хранить, купи ещё пару винтов в компьютер, делов то. Мультимедийные возможности таких приставок тоже сильно уступали отдельно стоящему компьютеру. Помню, несколько лет назад смотрел, как друг безуспешно пытается запустить там видео, закодированное редким кодеком. Однако, с появлением коптера места в облаке перестало хватать. К тому же, я подсел на стриминги, это изменило мои привычки. Можно качать отсутствующий фильм с торрентов, но я всё ещё хочу смотреть кино, сидя на диване перед телевизором. Сейчас уже ни одно устройство не записывает видео, которое невозможно было бы воспроизвести средствами NAS. А местный софт позволяет просто с телефона кинуться в специальное приложение магнет-ссылкой или торрент-файлом, и хранилище автоматически скачает фильм в нужную папку, после чего он будет доступен на всех телевизорах, телефонах и планшетах в доме, а при должной настройке ещё и из внешнего интернета. То есть да — я сижу в Москве в отеле с не слишком быстрым вайфаем, даю команду девайсу, стоящему дома в другом городе, через 5 минут 10-гигабайтное кино уже доступно мне стримом на телефон или ноутбук (дома сеть 400 мегабит). Ну и хранение. Идеально именно для сырых материалов со всяких съёмок: ценность их не критически высока, а места занимают много. Покупать для такого облако жалко, но иметь к ним доступ иногда нужно весьма неожиданно. Чем это лучше просто компьютера, настроенного определённым образом: - Устройство спроектировано специально для того, чтобы быть непрерывно включенным. - Занимает мало места. - Не шумит, не греется, пыль в себя не втягивает. - Весь нужный софт сразу из коробки, без возни, настраивается элементарно, работает отлично. #gadgets

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Туризм 360✈️🏔

@julia_koshurnikova · Post #361 · 16.11.2025 г., 15:59

Завтра у меня вебинар в Moscow Business School “Продажи в туризме: как масштабировать бизнес без увеличения штата» 17.11.2025 19:00 (по мск) Куда я вас и приглашаю🙌 #туризм360#вебинары#MBS#МБШ#обучение

Marwa Osman/MidEaStream

@Marwa_OsmanLB · Post #3965 · 04.02.2025 г., 04:38

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman received the appointed Syrian President Abu Mohamad al-Jawlani and his accompanying delegation upon his arrival at Al-Yamamah Palace in the Saudi capital, Riyadh. This was al-Jawlani’s first trip abroad since ousting the former regime. #Syria#SaudiArabia#Riyadh#MBS#AlJawlani

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5258 · 01.03.2026 г., 22:59

🛢 MBS, Bibi and the President With “No Imminent Threat” Trump’s Iran war didn’t start in the Situation Room. It started on the phone with Mohammed bin Salman and on TV with Benjamin Netanyahu. For weeks, the Saudi crown prince privately pressed Trump to strike Iran. At the same time, Riyadh publicly promised not to let its airspace be used and posed as a fan of “diplomacy.” Netanyahu kept doing what he has done for years: openly pushing the U.S. to hit what he calls Israel’s existential enemy. Together they helped sell Trump on a regime‑decapitation air campaign against a country of more than 90 million people. They were pushing against U.S. intelligence, not following it. American agencies judged that Iran posed no imminent threat to the U.S. homeland. Military analysts said any Iranian long‑range missile program was at least a decade away, if it even began. Nuclear inspectors reported no evidence that Iran had restarted enrichment after last summer’s strikes. Trump threw that all out and chose the stories from his favorite allies instead. Then he went on camera to talk about “imminent threats,” bombs, and payback for 1979, like this was a cable‑news sequel to the hostage crisis. The Saudi role looks especially cynical. In public, MBS talked about de‑escalation and said Saudi territory wouldn’t be used for attacks. In private, he warned U.S. officials that if Washington did not strike now — with the biggest American build‑up in the region since 2003 — Iran would come out stronger. His brother, Defense Minister Khalid bin Salman, flew to Washington in January to underline the “downsides” of not attacking. After the first U.S. wave, Iran hit Saudi targets anyway. Riyadh instantly switched to outraged statements demanding “all necessary and decisive measures” against Tehran. Inside Trump’s camp, the fantasy is that this is still “restrained.” JD Vance calls himself a skeptic of foreign wars and insists there is “no chance” of a drawn‑out conflict in the Middle East. At the same time, he backs an air war that has already hit seven countries in one term. Trump promises “heavy and pinpoint” bombing in Iran “throughout the week, or as long as necessary” to deliver “PEACE THROUGHOUT THE MIDDLE EAST AND, INDEED, THE WORLD!” It is regime change by real‑estate slogan. No plan for what happens on the ground. No clarity on who runs Iran if the system actually cracks. Just faith that smart bombs plus Twitter bravado can redesign a region. Veterans of earlier disasters are spelling out the obvious. Air power alone has a bad track record when the goal is to rewrite another country’s politics. Iraq in 2003 at least came with ground troops, a long occupation, and a giant civilian bureaucracy pretending to build a new state. This time, Trump is trying to do the deluxe regime‑change package at discount scale. The goals are the same — friendly regimes in Iran and Venezuela, crushed militias from Yemen to Somalia — but the method is cheaper: listen to a Gulf prince and an Israeli prime minister, ignore your own intel, drop bombs, and promise voters it will somehow be fast, clean, and paid for by someone else’s ruins. #Iran#Trump#Saudi#MBS#Netanyahu#war#regimeChange#USintelligence 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #4763 · 03.01.2026 г., 22:02

📰 Saudi Arabia’s Booze Ban: The Quiet Revolution Saudi Arabia is quietly lifting its decades-old ban on alcohol—no fanfare, no press release, just a discreet nod to modernization. In Riyadh, non-Muslim residents with premium status can now buy beer, wine, and spirits at a single, unmarked store. This isn’t just about booze. It’s about image, money, and the kingdom’s bid to attract wealthy expats and tourists. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has spent years transforming Saudi Arabia: women drive, concerts happen, and bars are built—even if they were empty until now. The process is low-key. At the liquor store, buyers show their residency card, prove they’re not Muslim, and stash their phones before browsing. The selection is decent, prices are high, but it’s still cheaper than the black market. Analysts say the change is just the start. Expect alcohol at luxury resorts and hotels along the Red Sea, following Dubai’s playbook. The kingdom needs foreign cash, and relaxing moral rules is part of the pitch. But it’s not a free-for-all. Alcohol will stay banned in religious cities like Mecca and Medina. The government is treading carefully, aware that most Saudis remain conservative. As one longtime expat put it: “It’s exciting. No more dangerous homemade liquor or overpriced smuggled bottles.” So while Saudi Arabia still executes dissenters and bans homosexuality, it’s learning to serve a cocktail. #SaudiArabia#alcohol#modernization#MBS#DubaiModel 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸