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The company is building a better corporate VPN by leveraging a modern protocol and focusing on ease of implementation. A VPN, or a virtual private network, is an encrypted tunnel between two devices.
Tailscale Inc. is a software company based in Toronto, Ontario. Tailscale develops a partially open-source software-defined mesh virtual private network (VPN) and a web-based management service. [ a ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The company provides a zero config VPN as a service under the same name.
WireGuard is a communication protocol and free and open-source software that implements encrypted virtual private networks (VPNs). [5] It aims to be lighter and better performing than IPsec and OpenVPN , two common tunneling protocols . [ 6 ]
Unfortunately Unraid doesn't provide information about its storage technology, but some [who?] say its parity array is a rewrite of the mdadm module. Disadvantages include closed-source code, high price [ citation needed ] , slower write performance than a single disk [ citation needed ] and bottlenecks when multiple drives are written ...
Unraid utilizes Docker to allow users to create and manage Docker containers to host applications on the system. In doing so, this allows Unraid users to host applications that may not support the Unraid operating system directly, could be difficult to install & remove, or may not behave correctly with other applications running on the same system.
ZeroTier, Inc. is a software company with a freemium business model based in Irvine, California.ZeroTier provides proprietary software, SDKs [1] and commercial products and services to create and manage virtual software-defined networks.
Amnezia introduced its own AmneziaWG protocol, a latest addition, which is an improved version of a popular WireGuard protocol and was designed to be used in the world's harshest internet climates. [5] Amnezia VPN does not require users to register, allowing all features to be accessed anonymously.
Gargoyle is a free OpenWrt-based Linux distribution for a range of wireless routers based on Broadcom, Atheros, MediaTek and others chipsets, [2] [3] Asus Routers, Netgear, Linksys and TP-Link routers.