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Domain > polarfire.net
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More information on this domain is in
AlienVault OTX
Is this malicious?
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No
DNS Resolutions
Date
IP Address
2019-11-24
13.225.62.46
(
ClassC
)
2019-11-24
13.225.62.83
(
ClassC
)
2020-07-12
99.84.214.53
(
ClassC
)
2020-07-12
99.84.214.101
(
ClassC
)
2021-09-14
13.249.72.17
(
ClassC
)
2024-07-16
99.84.66.54
(
ClassC
)
Port 80
HTTP/1.1 301 Moved PermanentlyServer: CloudFrontDate: Tue, 16 Jul 2024 21:31:22 GMTContent-Type: text/htmlContent-Length: 167Connection: keep-aliveLocation: https://polarfire.net/X-Cache: Redirect from cloudfrontVia: 1.1 4d7fa73f804f1c93f20cfc24c4b1266e.cloudfront.net (CloudFront)X-Amz-Cf-Pop: HIO50-C1X-Amz-Cf-Id: k55ZPdfjGFhzLQwg6RSSxYqgpTp671LHcCue9UVafRUWHWgfYddZYg html>head>title>301 Moved Permanently/title>/head>body>center>h1>301 Moved Permanently/h1>/center>hr>center>CloudFront/center>/body>/html>
Port 443
HTTP/1.1 200 OKContent-Type: text/htmlContent-Length: 6304Connection: keep-aliveDate: Tue, 16 Jul 2024 21:28:49 GMTx-amz-meta-inputhash: dc20de0d6983bd113cde1fc124a0882b-4Last-Modified: Thu, 23 Sep 2021 11:15:44 GMTETag: 910f46d6121f1c8214b28100b74d2ddfServer: AmazonS3Vary: Accept-EncodingX-Cache: Hit from cloudfrontVia: 1.1 4d7fa73f804f1c93f20cfc24c4b1266e.cloudfront.net (CloudFront)X-Amz-Cf-Pop: HIO50-C1X-Amz-Cf-Id: g0gTtz4DgDFEiATWEkb8duW_xg26bF5ED8K7aXnU9HzBRE9TU_pkggAge: 154 !DOCTYPE html>html langen-US>meta charsetutf-8>title>All Posts — A Litany of Errors/title>link relalternate typeapplication/atom+xml titleAtom Feed href/atom.xml />meta nameviewport contentwidthdevice-width, initial-scale1>link relstylesheet href/main.css>link relapple-touch-icon sizes180x180 href/apple-touch-icon.png>link relicon typeimage/png sizes32x32 href/favicon-32x32.png>link relicon typeimage/png sizes16x16 href/favicon-16x16.png>nav> a classtitle href/>A Litany of Errors/a> a href/about>About/a> a classsearch>Search/a>/nav>div classcontent> article classsummary> h1 classpost-title>a href/posts/track-saw>Track Saw/a>/h1> div classpost-metadata> time datetime2021-1-14>1/14/2021/time> a classtag href/tag/woodworking>#woodworking/a> a classtag href/tag/tools>#tools/a> /div> div classpost-summary> img classcontent-image image-preview data-slugcompleted data-large-url/img/posts/track-saw/completed-1600w.jpg src/img/posts/track-saw/completed-600w.jpg srcset/img/posts/track-saw/completed-300w.jpg 300w, /img/posts/track-saw/completed-400w.jpg 400w, /img/posts/track-saw/completed-600w.jpg 600w, /img/posts/track-saw/completed-768w.jpg 768w, /img/posts/track-saw/completed-1600w.jpg 1600w sizes(min-width: 848px) 254px, 30vw altCompleted> p>Having made a handful of cuts with my circular saw both by hand and using makeshift fences, I decided that I wasn’t quite satisfied with the accuracy that I was able to achieve./p> p>I looked into a handful of options for making more precise cuts and settled on trying to make a track saw conversion for it. After watching several “DIY Track Saw” videos on YouTube that involved varying levels of complexity and hardware, I picked one to follow and build. I wanted one that would be reversible so that I could still use the circular saw on its own if I desired. I altered the design slightly by using sup>1/sup>⁄sub>4/sub>″ plywood throughout instead of a combination of sup>1/sup>⁄sub>4/sub>″ MDF panel and a sup>1/sup>⁄sub>2/sub>″ MDF board in order to keep it a bit lighter./p> /div> div classread-more>a href/posts/track-saw>Read More…/a>/div> /article> article classsummary> h1 classpost-title>a href/posts/tables>Tables/a>/h1> div classpost-metadata> time datetime2020-11-10>11/10/2020/time> a classtag href/tag/woodworking>#woodworking/a> a classtag href/tag/furniture>#furniture/a> /div> div classpost-summary> img classcontent-image image-preview data-slugcoffee-table-done data-large-url/img/posts/tables/coffee-table-done-1600w.jpg src/img/posts/tables/coffee-table-done-600w.jpg srcset/img/posts/tables/coffee-table-done-300w.jpg 300w, /img/posts/tables/coffee-table-done-400w.jpg 400w, /img/posts/tables/coffee-table-done-600w.jpg 600w, /img/posts/tables/coffee-table-done-768w.jpg 768w, /img/posts/tables/coffee-table-done-1600w.jpg 1600w sizes(min-width: 848px) 254px, 30vw altCoffee Table Done> p>I had just moved into a new place and needed some living room furniture. I planned a set of three matching items – an entry table, a coffee table, and a set of a href/posts/tables>shelves/a>. The tables were simpler so I started with those. I staggered the steps, building one part of the entry table first and then afterwards doing the same for the coffee table. Because the two were so similar, I was often able to immediately apply lessons learned from one to the other./p> p>I spent quite a while searching around for different potential designs online and ended up settling on something like this a hrefhttps://www.target.com/p/a-frame-rustic-entry-console-table-saracina-home/-/A-53933725 relnoopener noreferrer>A-Frame Table/a> for the entry table. The same basic design squashed down shorter and wider would serve for the coffee table./p> /div> div classread-more>a href/posts/tables>Read More…/a>/div> /article> article classsummary> h1 classpost-title>a href/posts/wine-rack>Wine Rack/a>/h1> div classpost-metadata> time datetime2020-10-26>10/26/2020/time> a classtag href/tag/woodworking>#woodworking/a> /div> div classpost-summary> img classcontent-image image-preview data-slugfinished-product data-large-url/img/posts/wine-rack/finished-product-1600w.jpg src/img/posts/wine-rack/finished-product-600w.jpg srcset/img/posts/wine-rack/finished-product-300w.jpg 300w, /img/posts/wine-rack/finished-product-400w.jpg 400w, /img/posts/wine-rack/finished-product-600w.jpg 600w, /img/posts/wine-rack/finished-product-768w.jpg 768w, /img/posts/wine-rack/finished-product-1600w.jpg 1600w sizes(min-width: 848px) 254px, 30vw altFinished Product> p>This was the first of my quarantine projects, and I wanted something relatively simple to get into woodworking. It had been several years since I built anything, and hadn’t ever really worked with hardwoods. I was already planning some a href/posts/shelves>living room/a> a href/posts/tables>furniture/a> but wanted a small project to start off with./p> p>I have a few wine bottles but didn’t have any dedicated storage for them. I didn’t need a particularly high capacity rack and was planning to store it on a small shelf within a cupboard. I also had an irregular piece of leftover hardwood to use for the project. The width of the shelf that I intended to put the rack on and the dimensions of the board provided some initial size constraints for the project./p> /div> div classread-more>a href/posts/wine-rack>Read More…/a>/div> /article> div classpagination> Posts 1–3 of 3 /div>/div>footer> span>© Isaac Simmons 2021/span> span>—/span> span>a rellicense noopener noreferrer hrefhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>cc by-sa 4.0/a> licensed/span> span>—/span> a href/atom.xml>Subscribe/a>/footer>/html>
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