

I am used to XE just because I’ve used it since, like, forever. I just uninstalled and see if this app Currencies fits the bill.
I am used to XE just because I’ve used it since, like, forever. I just uninstalled and see if this app Currencies fits the bill.
I don’t have an account there, I only use the app when I need to know what are the rates at that moment.
Not FOSS, but XE is what I use for currency exchange
Install the app on the corp phone
Have you installed the vm tools on the guest?
You are damn right. I totally forgot vimusic was having issues and was no longer maintained, so I switched to a fork named ViTune, which is not without it’s flaws, but works pretty nice overall
Nice homework you got there. Imo you need to read the manpages for cron or systemd timers, to schedule your tasks. Any cloud based calendar app can help you for the notification. And I think any genai tool can get you a suitable chunk of code depending on your specifics about the scripting.
TPM storage, perhaps?
manages to give absolutely no useful information to what your problem could be
It is clear to me this is either a troll, or a layer 8 issue.
Flatpaks and Snaps are supposed to replace native distro packaging, in order to be distro agnostic (you could run it on any distro), the issue with Snaps is that it depends on Canonical’s mood and it is Ubuntu “native”, whereas Flatpak is way more used elsewhere.
There is AppImages as well, but it used to a lesser extent.
It depends on the specifics of the install script, it could be it called to directly download and install the binaries (no packaging), or it ran a set of validations then download and install a native package (.deb in this case).
Sonarr takes care of it
On my synology nas I have installed navidrome to serve the music, and consume it via web, and a few android and linux apps like ultrasonic or supersonic
Depending on your level of paranioia. First, you don’t expose your containers, but their port(s).
With a reverse proxy, you will likely expose only 1 port, 443, no matter how many apps/containers/ports it will be pointing internally. For this, having a proper dns setup will be key, and a service like cloudflare dns (not tunnel), which additionally you can proxy your proxy. Also, you will need certificates (letsencrypt) for your traffic to be encrypted. Here, everybody will potentially have access to your services.
Another option is a zero trust tunnel, but as you had seen streaming may break tos. It will be likely enforced if you stream a lot, but I seriously doubt you’ll get any problem by having sporadic one or two users.
Tailscale, you need to add all the devices you need to access your services into the mesh, and you’ll need to re-authenticate every one again every few months.
Setting up a VPN (selfhosted) will require your devices to sign into it when accessing your services, and it seems to me the best approach as this way you will nave the most control over your setting.
Don’t forget to mention that, for this to work, your ISP should provide you with public IP, because if on CGNAT you will have to go with something like tunnels or tailscale.
I’ve found that as well with some files. At first I thought the issue was with the jellyfin instance had not enough capabilities, but after trying the same file with its subtitles, it worked on any other client: flatpak, web, and regular android. So for me it is the chromecast/androidtv device, so I am now looking what to replace it with
You cannot select the audio track when watching from mobile browsers, so you are stuck with what you were served.
No, I won’t open the native app.