

Each number between the dots is made up of 8 bits, so each one is a maximum of 255.


Each number between the dots is made up of 8 bits, so each one is a maximum of 255.


https://archive.is/yIkXA


Many people talking about using subdomains, but that’s only really a thing if you actually have a domain. Just last year the domain .internal was reserved for internal use, so that’s what I’ve set up all my domains to use. E.g. https://pihole.internal/, https://proxmox.internal/.
To make this work I use pihole’s local dns records to rewrite any *.internal domain to point to my reverse proxy Caddy’s ip.
As for the certificates, I created my own CA, which I install on all my and my family’s devices. Then, for each new url I set up, I create a new certificate and sign it with my CA certificate, then have my reverse proxy serve it.
This all sounds like a lot of work, and it is, but using OPNsense for both reverse proxy and certificates makes it well integrated and certificates are trivial to renew. With that said, if you have your own domain, go the let’s encrypt subdomain route instead imo. It saves you a lot of manual labor with setting up your CA on every device you own and creating new certificates for each site.


I usually explain it like email, most people get it then. Doesn’t matter if you’re using @outlook.com or @gmail.com when sending an email, you can talk to users on either as long as you specify the server address (which is mandatory in email anyway).


I’ve been using Matrix/Element for about a year now. I think it’s been great and have no plans on using anything else, I’ve even started donating to the matrix foundation. I self-host a server and using bridge bots I’ve aggregated all my chat services into Matrix, so I talk to my friends on signal using the Element app.
A few notes:


I’ve been following this since release and can only say a big thank you for how active you’ve been on this project! It’s great to see a developer take an active part in feedback and ideas and quickly being able to get them into the project. Keep going strong, and thank you!


According to Wikipedia the shared Swedish/Danish postal service is shared 60%/40% by the Swedish and Danish governments respectively, so im not sure how privatised it is really if it’s completely owned by government.
“The owners of PostNord Group are the state of Sweden (60 percent) and the Ministry of Transport of Denmark (40 percent).” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PostNord


Huh, it’s been nearly flawless for me as well. Had it randomly hang once a few months ago but I think that may have been due to a lack of resources for that lxc. Other than that it’s been flawless over multiple apps: Linux, Android (element, schildichat next, fluffy), windows, web. All synced and verified.
How did I not know this. Thank you!
You saying I can just skip cat in that command and it works?


This is the way. Randomise your usernames and use a password manager to keep track of them.


And obviously, encrypted folders can’t be accessed through the file system even with the fuse add on, because that would break the whole point of encryption.
To me, the one big advantage Seafile has is its e2e encryption and encrypted folders, as it allows me to host it externally without allowing access to my files to the server administrator.


I looked at the comparison for Seafile as that’s the one I’m most familiar with. In my opinion Seafile’s greatest strength is its encryption, but in your comparison you seem to see this as a negative as I assume this bullet refers to the encryption? “isolated on-disk file hierarchy, incompatible with other software. much worse than nextcloud in that regard”


Any place to suggest missing foods? After a bit of searching I found that chickpeas are missing.


Perhaps Eco. It’s a bit like Minecraft but much more farming, if you choose the farming profession, and no combat whatsoever. Mainly a multiplayer game through public servers but it’s doable solo as well through settings.
Hope it went well!