

deleted by creator


deleted by creator
Yeah, this is what I do. Only wish mobile had the option.


Kind of stuck with Discord for the moment, but I’ve just been using a separate Firefox profile dedicated to the service. It’s nice seeing multiple accounts at once and having easy access to extensions.


deleted by creator


My fuzzy memory wants to say it uses/is based atop UDP, and makes it more reliable.
Just checked before posting, and that seems to be the case on a cursory glance of its wiki article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QUIC
[EDIT] Should have read the article first—and it does mention UDP by the end.


This is a service provided by some DNS hosts, with their own special subdomains, and is not universal. They may also require slightly different options.
Other options include:
Google (query for txt record): @ns1.google.com o-o.myaddr.l.google.com
Akaimai (query for txt record): @ns1-1.akamaitech.net whoami.akamai.net
Cloudflare: @1.1.1.1 whoami.cloudflare
Cisco (there are four, as far as can tell): @resolver[1-4].opendns.com myip.opendns.com
…and likely others.


dig -6 +short .opendns.com myip.opendns.com AAAA
Note: You have to ensure you are actually contacting the server with IPv6.


I worry less about the service breaking, changing, or otherwise disappearing, over a random website.
EDIT: Also what was said in a sibling comment.


I saw it used in another comment, and am already aware of the use of curl for such a task, but choose to query DNS services instead—especially in scripts.


#!/usr/bin/sh
dig -4 +short @resolver2.opendns.com myip.opendns.com
#!/usr/bin/pwsh
Resolve-DnsName -Server resolver2.opendns.com -Name myip.opendns.com -Type A | % { echo $_.IPAddress }
There should be an IPv6 resolver, but I don’t remember and am currently unable to test. My PowerShell skills are also effectively non-existent.
There are local taxes on energy/electricity commerce in some number of jurisdictions, if that matters. New York, as an example: https://www.tax.ny.gov/forms/publications/st/pub718r.htm
I’d have to look into whether or how the mentioned—waived—4% state tax would apply on non-residential chargers. I would tend to imagine that any taxes on such would more-or-less cover the same.
Edited for clarity and to include link to example.