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  2. pfSense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PfSense

    pfSense is a firewall/router computer software distribution based on FreeBSD. The open source pfSense Community Edition (CE) and pfSense Plus is installed on a physical computer or a virtual machine to make a dedicated firewall/router for a network. [ 3 ]

  3. qcow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qcow

    qcow is a file format for disk image files used by QEMU, a hosted virtual machine monitor. [1] It stands for "QEMU Copy On Write" and uses a disk storage optimization strategy that delays allocation of storage until it is actually needed.

  4. Windows Update - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Update

    Windows 10 contains major changes to Windows Update Agent operations; it no longer allows the manual, selective installation of updates. All updates, regardless of type (this includes hardware drivers), are downloaded and installed automatically, and users are only given the option to choose whether their system would reboot automatically to ...

  5. QEMU - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QEMU

    QEMU integrates several services to allow the host and guest systems to communicate for example: an integrated SMB server and network-port redirection (to allow incoming connections to the virtual machine). It can also boot Linux kernels without a bootloader. QEMU does not depend on the presence of graphical output methods on the host system.

  6. FreeBSD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FreeBSD

    Amazon EC2 AMI instances are also supported via amazon-ssm-agent. Since FreeBSD 11.0, there has been support for running as the Dom0 privileged domain for the Xen type 1 hypervisor. [87] Support for running as DomU (guest) has been available since FreeBSD 8.0. VirtualBox (without the closed-source Extension Pack) and QEMU are available on FreeBSD.

  7. HEAT LANrev - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HEAT_LANrev

    [9] [10] LANrev software was used in the Lower Merion school district's student laptop program, overseen by network technician Michael Perbix. [ 11 ] In February 2010, Perbix and other administrators in the district were accused of using the software to take undisclosed and unauthorized photographs of students through the webcams on their ...