- 12 Posts
- 138 Comments
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Good experience with neko remote browserEnglish2·17 days agoYes, this.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Good experience with neko remote browserEnglish1·17 days agoThanks yes - that’s exactly what I needed.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Good experience with neko remote browserEnglish3·17 days agoThanks - this is exactly what I needed.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Good experience with neko remote browserEnglish6·17 days agoYes - we’re “I’ll let you use my electricity for your computer thing” friends, not “I’m okay with seeing your printer on my home network” friends.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldto Archaeology@mander.xyz•Over 3,000 years ago the Assyrians developed a remarkably advanced underwater technique, as illustrated in this ancient relief. It shows Assyrian soldiers using goatskin bags filled with air to breathEnglish7·28 days agoSpot on. I guess that’s one of those lead smurf hats.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Best option for hosting ebooks and audiobooks?English2·29 days agoKavita is for ebooks - it’s not perfect, has some weirdness with series sometimes because of it’s manga heritage.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Best option for hosting ebooks and audiobooks?English7·30 days agoFor me, AudioBookShelf is the clear standout for audio books, and I ended up going with Kavita for ebooks.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How do you document your Homelab?English7·1 month agoI have it in a git repo, broken down by the nodes and vps names. In each of these folders is a mixture of Ansible playbooks, docker compose or just markdown files with the descriptions. Some is random stuff - my VPS allows the export of the cloud firewalls as JSON for instance. All the secrets needed by Ansible are in an Ansible vault, the rest in KeePass.
Yep. Glad he’s got a system that works for him, but as a solo dev I love my Forgejo. I self host it, (so no Trust issues) and if you’ve hosted any other services before, the setup is a simple Docker compose - so I’m not sure I accept the Heavyweight argument either.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Difference between Github, Gitlab, Forgejo ?English9·4 months agoGreat comprehensive answer. The only thing I might have added (at the risk of confusing things) is that Codeberg is a non-profit, community-led effort that provides Git hosting (with Forgejo), so a sort of open source GitHub
I started doing this, maybe 15 years ago, but if I look through my spam folder now, most of it is to the email address I used before I began using unique addresses (the rest is to random addresses in my domains that I’ve never used).
My hypotheses from that are that
- there is probably less ‘selling of email lists’ going on than we think
- I’m less interested in dubious internet sites than I used to be
- or (most likely) these days, your internet thing has to be offering me some real value if I’m going to consciously give you any of my data.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldto Programming@programming.dev•Best Alternative to Postman?English25·6 months agoIt got enshittified. I went to use it one day and it wouldn’t work without creating an account.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldto Programming@programming.dev•Best Alternative to Postman?English9·6 months agoSame - As an Insomnia refugee, I thought “Oh no, not this again” and felt foolish for evangelising it.
I like data, I like tech, I like investing large amounts of time and energy to self-host things that muggles would not bother with.
I mean, yes, I could. But I’m committed to the #selfhosted life where I spend hours building unnecessarily complicated systems to make my life easier in small ways.
I’m starting to think my commitment to the Apple ecosystem and my desire for self-hosting are at odds.
The process for this is to obtain an EPS32 with bluetooth and wifi, pair it to the scale with bluetooth then keep it powered on in range of the scale, then the data goes into HA?
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How to use LXC containers in Proxmox?English6·6 months agoI have the opposite experience of this. All of my local services are a single docker container inside an LXC. I don’t like that it’s conceptually messy, but in practice it’s easy to manage. What I love about it is the simplicity of backing up or moving the entire LXC between servers.
I’ve not had any drama with things breaking across Proxmox updates. The only non-gui thing I need to do during the process is adding two lines to the LXC conf to have Tailscale work correctly.
thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Let's Encrypt is 10 years old today !English37·7 months agoIt’s mind-bogglingly convenient, especially compared to the before times. Consider donating to them if you can.
It is only resolving for devices in the Tailnet. Kuma is checking they are all up, and this Ansible playbook is checking they have all their updates. I wouldn’t have thought that was an unusual arrangement - and it’s worked perfectly for about a year till about three weeks ago.