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System Name | AlderLake / Laptop |
---|---|
Processor | Intel i7 12700K P-Cores @ 5Ghz / Intel i3 7100U |
Motherboard | Gigabyte Z690 Aorus Master / HP 83A3 (U3E1) |
Cooling | Noctua NH-U12A 2 fans + Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut Extreme + 5 case fans / Fan |
Memory | 32GB DDR5 Corsair Dominator Platinum RGB 6000MHz CL36 / 8GB DDR4 HyperX CL13 |
Video Card(s) | MSI RTX 2070 Super Gaming X Trio / Intel HD620 |
Storage | Samsung 980 Pro 1TB + 970 Evo 500GB + 850 Pro 512GB + 860 Evo 1TB x2 / Samsung 256GB M.2 SSD |
Display(s) | 23.8" Dell S2417DG 165Hz G-Sync 1440p / 14" 1080p IPS Glossy |
Case | Be quiet! Silent Base 600 - Window / HP Pavilion |
Audio Device(s) | Panasonic SA-PMX94 / Realtek onboard + B&O speaker system / Harman Kardon Go + Play / Logitech G533 |
Power Supply | Seasonic Focus Plus Gold 750W / Powerbrick |
Mouse | Logitech MX Anywhere 2 Laser wireless / Logitech M330 wireless |
Keyboard | RAPOO E9270P Black 5GHz wireless / HP backlit |
Software | Windows 11 / Windows 10 |
Benchmark Scores | Cinebench R23 (Single Core) 1936 @ stock Cinebench R23 (Multi Core) 23006 @ stock |
"If there's no Amazon, where do they get their Kim Jong-un colouring-in books?"
"THE GLORIOUS internet of North Korea is a pretty sparse and dull affair, according to a leak of the country's DNS servers.
Just 28 websites have appeared on the local domain, and there are no prizes for guessing that they are not household names in the West.
For example, there is no Sony.kp, which you might have expected to see until you remember that Sony was completely and utterly hacked by a nation state that just about everybody said was North Korea.
Nor were we expecting to see Netflix.kp just in case it decided to show The Interview. Films look to be taken care of via a domain called Korfilm.com.kp, but this was mostly text when we checked.
There is no Amazon.kp, which makes us wonder where the gloriously democratic people of the country pick up their supreme leader Kim Jong-un colouring-in books or the Great Korean Supreme Leader Bake Off on DVD.
What does surprise us is that the list of 28 sites on GitHub doesn't include Manbang, which is Korea's take on Netflix that we reported on earlier and had a good giggle over.
The list is a leak, so North Korea probably cannot get too mad about this, at least not at the outside world. The data is treated rather sympathetically on GitHub, and introduced as the fruits of a failure at one of North Korea's top-level name servers.
"On Sept 19, 2016 at approximately 10:00PM (PDT) one of North Korea's top-level name servers was accidentally configured to allow global DNS zone transfers," said the introduction on GitHub.
"This allows anyone who performs an AXFR (zone transfer) request to the country's ns2.kptc.kp name server to get a copy of the nation's top-level DNS data.
"This was detected by the TL;DR Project, an effort to attempt zone transfers against all top-level domain name servers every two hours and keep a running GitHub repo with the resulting data. This data gives us a better picture of North Korea's domains and top-level DNS."
It does, and the picture is bleak."
http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer...rean-dns-leak-finds-just-28-official-kp-sites
"THE GLORIOUS internet of North Korea is a pretty sparse and dull affair, according to a leak of the country's DNS servers.
Just 28 websites have appeared on the local domain, and there are no prizes for guessing that they are not household names in the West.
For example, there is no Sony.kp, which you might have expected to see until you remember that Sony was completely and utterly hacked by a nation state that just about everybody said was North Korea.
Nor were we expecting to see Netflix.kp just in case it decided to show The Interview. Films look to be taken care of via a domain called Korfilm.com.kp, but this was mostly text when we checked.
There is no Amazon.kp, which makes us wonder where the gloriously democratic people of the country pick up their supreme leader Kim Jong-un colouring-in books or the Great Korean Supreme Leader Bake Off on DVD.
What does surprise us is that the list of 28 sites on GitHub doesn't include Manbang, which is Korea's take on Netflix that we reported on earlier and had a good giggle over.
The list is a leak, so North Korea probably cannot get too mad about this, at least not at the outside world. The data is treated rather sympathetically on GitHub, and introduced as the fruits of a failure at one of North Korea's top-level name servers.
"On Sept 19, 2016 at approximately 10:00PM (PDT) one of North Korea's top-level name servers was accidentally configured to allow global DNS zone transfers," said the introduction on GitHub.
"This allows anyone who performs an AXFR (zone transfer) request to the country's ns2.kptc.kp name server to get a copy of the nation's top-level DNS data.
"This was detected by the TL;DR Project, an effort to attempt zone transfers against all top-level domain name servers every two hours and keep a running GitHub repo with the resulting data. This data gives us a better picture of North Korea's domains and top-level DNS."
It does, and the picture is bleak."
http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer...rean-dns-leak-finds-just-28-official-kp-sites