Where to fly your drone
Now that I own a DJI Spark …
Singapore: flywhere.sg.
World (not very detailed): foxnomad.com/2017/07/25/map-shows-drone-laws-every-country-world-updated-regularly
And also embedded here:
18 posts
Now that I own a DJI Spark …
Singapore: flywhere.sg.
World (not very detailed): foxnomad.com/2017/07/25/map-shows-drone-laws-every-country-world-updated-regularly
And also embedded here:
Check out her cool site!
Cheap flights with Thai Airways (economy). SIN - BKK - DXB.
Couple of days of Dubai with Shan. So going to ski and quad in the desert !
Emirates. Finally. Been trying so long to fly with them. And in business class. :)
1x A380 and 3x B777.
I’ll be around for a few drinks in Belgium !
So, I have an EdgeRouter Lite in Singapore (Starhub) and a FritzBox in Belgium (EDPnet).
This is mostly stuff that I have found from several articles, mostly from here.
ERL: eth0 is WAN, eth1 (10.60.111.0/24) and eth2 (unused, not VPN’ed) are LAN FritzBoz: 192.168.1.0/24
This is the FritzBox config (go to VPN and them Import a config) fritzvpn.cfg:
vpncfg {
connections {
enabled = yes;
conn_type = conntype_lan;
name = "VPN Yeri";
always_renew = yes;
reject_not_encrypted = no;
dont_filter_netbios = yes;
localip = 0.0.0.0;
local_virtualip = 0.0.0.0;
remoteip = 0.0.0.0;
remote_virtualip = 0.0.0.0;
remotehostname = "erl.yeri.be";
localid {
fqdn = "fritz.yeri.be";
}
remoteid {
fqdn = "erl.yeri.be";
}
mode = phase1_mode_idp;
phase1ss = "all/all/all";
keytype = connkeytype_pre_shared;
key = "SOMEPASSWORD";
cert_do_server_auth = no;
use_nat_t = yes;
use_xauth = no;
use_cfgmode = no;
phase2localid {
ipnet {
ipaddr = 192.168.1.0;
mask = 255.255.255.0;
}
}
phase2remoteid {
ipnet {
ipaddr = 10.60.111.0;
mask = 255.255.255.0;
}
}
phase2ss = "esp-all-all/ah-none/comp-all/pfs";
accesslist = "permit ip any 10.60.111.0 255.255.255.0";
}
ike_forward_rules = "udp 0.0.0.0:500 0.0.0.0:500",
"udp 0.0.0.0:4500 0.0.0.0:4500";
}
Be sure to modify the password, local (Fritz) and remote (ERL) LAN and edit the local and remote fqdn.
Probably the best and easiest to understand Blockchain explanation I’ve seen.
(Source)
Just like Hong Kong (Octopus), Seoul (T-Money) and London (Oyster), Singapore has a public transport card (Ez-Link). Like HK and Seoul, you can use this card for small payments in 7/11 alike shops.
This payment card works on all transport modes. Bus. MRT (metro). No matter who operates it.
Sadly it doesn’t work on taxis though.
Nonetheless. With a bunch of different players (SMRT, SBS, any other? But the same is true for London – and they have more players on the market) they have one simple unified payment system (and prices are the same no matter who is operating).