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Product Description
Whether you’re jotting down a to-do list or making labels, the Cubinote Pro lets you print personalized sticky notes from any device in seconds. Capable of printing text, images, QR codes, and more, it uses a custom thermal paper with a specialty coating that requires no ink Read More
This is such a waste of money. Just grab any thermal printer off of eBay with POS/ESC compatibility and you are good to go, they even come in Bluetooth variety with battery so you can carry it around. They are around 30$ and work like charm. Granted width of paper is a bit smaller but this also makes it significantly easier to find and buy paper. Pretty much any office supply store will have this paper and it's dirt cheap.
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This is the one I got and it cost me $34 delivered.
Again, try JIRA. The agile plugin will allow you to literally drag and drop tickets all over the board instantly, assign points, categorize, link related tickets and issues, and have triggers get fired off to via API trigger to, say, build a new image using Jenkins and the topic branch of your Git repository that a dev is working off of and has linked to a ticket. Try it, it's Atlassian software and it's got a free trial, excellent community and tons of great resourceful plugins that are installable via in-app marketplace made available to the admin user group.
jceaserJust simulate their server traffic yourself. Sniff the ACK reply packet back from their servers inbound for the service port your printer is listening on, grab the whole frame, and now you're going to create a couple firewall rules.
First, drop all inbound traffic from their IP block (obtained from inbound ACK TCP packet frame header) server to begin with. any and all traffic outbound to their offsite servers. This is obviously a security hole and anyting you write via form of a postit note on a printer that you paid for is none of their fucking business.
Second, create a second rule that says and traffic from the printer that is destined outbound to their systems be dropped and instead echo'd back to their client with an artificial ACK packet, the very same packet you captured in the beginning.
Of course that's assuming that these things just use a single port/IP relationship on every print and not something more complicated that occurs on a per-transaction basis. :P