Honestly I would replace Ubuntu with an actual operating system designed for servers.
Honestly I would replace Ubuntu with an actual operating system designed for servers.
Self-hosted Bitwarden.
Trillium
You’re most welcome.
If I create a private community for all my family members it remains private while I selfhost. If I create it on someone else’s server it ain’t that private because the admin could be eavesdropping.
That would be next to impossible to fix because the issue lies with the protocols not with the framework using the protocols.
Well it is a different type of mail system. I use it for catch all. I have like 200 domain names for various projects or registered to sell and I want to catch all emails sent to those domains without setting them up in mailcow. With Anonaddy I verify their DNS records and that’s it. I can capture all emails sent to them and forward to a specific address. Also, I can use whatever email address I want with whatever domain I want to subscribe to services and keep track of who sells my email for instance. They also have a Chrome extension that you can use to generate emails, but imho that is overkill. Then if you see that one email gets too much spam you can simply delete that forwarder and it gets rejected in the future.
I work with VMs mostly, so I go for Veeam B&R. The free tier allows you to backup 10 VMs or machines.
Yes, with mailcow.email and a catchall and random email system with Anonaddy.
I run my own instance because I have the resources, I intend to create communities and it is much more private this way.
You are still giving them traffic, just not directly.
I have a dual boot with High Sierra and Monterey. I went first for Monterey but my Terascale 1 GPU was causing the screen to flicker constantly and would not work with a second monitor. For some reason High Sierra was more stable. Then two weeks ago OCLP released another root patch which fixed all the problems of the Terascale 1 GPU and now they both work fine so I will probably upgrade Monterey to Ventura later this week.
I am both. I have MacOS on MacMini (late 2018) and MacOS with OCLP on MacPRO (early 2008).
+1 all my servers run Linux or FreeBSD, I use macOS as desktop (most of the stuff is neat and out of the box and it uses less resources) and I use Windows while working with my customers and some of their servers. I would definitely not choose Linux for desktop (I tried and gave up), but it is great for the servers.
Privacy wise for me it is more convenient to run my own instance and have my own private communities.
With this Docker image: lscr.io/linuxserver/code-server
Here is a sample docker-compose.yml.
edit: replaced code block with link due to the formatting being a complete mess
I have been using ripME on all the subreddits that I have on my subscription list and have been dowloading for two weeks now and it is still going strong.
Well thanks to the soon to be dead /r/selfhosted on reddit I started selfhosting few years ago and now approximately 90% of my stuff is selfhosted:
as daily drivers and several others that I use from time to time.
Mlem looks promising, if it can develop the save functionality that Apollo has then it gets my vote.
Is it just me or the link returns a 404?