How to turn anything into a router
An Internet, reacting to the American government's (business model: 'Uber for frequency allocation') latest performative security panic, proudly demonstrates that with enough discarded junk and a calcified refusal to adopt IPv6, one can build a towering edifice of software to serve text files to six strangers almost as well as a $50 plastic box. Hackernews, literally all of whom are expert network architects who ran IP Masquerade on a Pentium MMX in 1998, immediately erupts into doctrinal warfare over the theological purity of single-NIC VLAN configurations versus the profligate waste of a USB dongle. Meanwhile, other Hackernews have solved the impending router embargo by recommending twelve different underpowered SBCs from questionable marketplaces, three separate abandoned firewall distros, and the purchase of a used Mac Pro trash can, ensuring the only thing being effectively routed is venture capital into Aliexpress. The stakes are high, for if this knowledge is lost, an entire industry built on convincing people that OpenWRT on a Raspberry Pi is a revolutionary homelab project might collapse.