It feels dirty now when using Windows. Like a 2nd hand playboy magazine.
Toes
I wouldn't be surprised if there was some sort of safety rule about looking at a screen.
The longer I live the more it feels like I'm living in the startrek timeline
If you're not concerned with compatibility with Windows. Replace your filesystem with ext4.
Yeah, fat32 is the devil when it comes to working with large files. (It's fine for /boot)
Since I'm not too familiar with your environment I'm just going to list some possibilities.
Check that you're not using a fat16/fat32 filesystem anywhere. Host, Docker, download location. If this is the cause, exfat is supported by Windows and Linux if you need reverse compatibility.
Confirm you're running the 64bit version.
Can you determine if the problem starts happening around the 4GB size.
Perhaps there's not enough free space for it to download and copy the file from the temporary location to the destination at the same time.
Perhaps the file name including the path has become too long.
GPT tried to convince me that there was more time in 366 days than 1.78 years.
Isn't that the premise of cyberpunk 2077? The greater internet had to be trashed
Yeah in North America they are in the process of discontinuing 3G service and older support all together as well.
If you're familiar with the Hawaii missile alert incident. It's that feature I'm concerned about for them. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_Hawaii_false_missile_alert
I'll have to look into that.
In my country emergency broadcasts are only supported on lte enabled devices. I'm not sure about the os requirement for that either.
Got any solid recommendations?
Whenever I browse them they all look like a scam or don't support LTE.
If I was in your IT department I'd be required to shut this down and probably revoke your access until our bosses decide on your future.
Keep in mind, your employer has a responsibility to protect their data and this would subject your homelab to any legal liabilities such as a lawsuit search order and data privacy auditing.
Any solution you work out needs to be signed off on in writing if it's outside their expected usage.
Another important point o365 requires oauth2 authentication unless your IT department has intentionally allowed other forms of authentication or they are in a hybrid legacy environment.
When they broke EWS and office 2010 compatibility they crippled many foss solutions without an additional license and the tools that do work will report details to exchange about your homelab. So if your department is diligent it'll come to their attention.
This is the first I've heard about it