

Gold star for you!
41 / m / chicago / bass
Gold star for you!
This one: https://www.turnkeylinux.org/fileserver
Nextcloud was too high fallutin for me. I share a zfs pool with proxmox’s file server appliance.
Never heard of this, but it sounds really neat. Can it actually replace ddg in my daily life?
CumBroth and oldfart, thank you for being internet heroes. Soulless is the best.
Ddclient has done the trick for me, and my registrar supports it with an API
I call it butter fuss. Yours is better.
I use unbound with pi-hole inside an Ubuntu lxc container. No additional device needed.
You delicious bastard! Thanks for the rook tip.
Wow, you’re an ass. I bet I could update a dual monitor setup with different resolutions, refresh rates and positions with nvidia-settings faster than you can editing xorg.conf in vim. My point is that people should use the best tool for the job instead of stroking their superiority complex to prove a point.
slackware has been my daily driver since the late 90s. It still boots to CLI by default. I’m more than comfortable in a terminal emulator. I’m also fine with clicking on stuff. I don’t use portainer, but there’s nothing wrong with people who do.
Beautifully said. I can’t say I’ve come across too many GUI purists, but I’ve definitely been shamed by terminal absolutists who are fine with turning a 1 second process into a 10 second one. There’s a time and place for both.
See also: bass players who use a pick.
What about neither and tailscale (free) on all your devices? Or are you often phoning home on outside devices?
I personally bought a domain name (namecheap) for my vps. Then I set up ddclient on my home pc to fetch my external IP every so often and update namecheap. But I didn’t feel it was secure enough. Tailscale is easier, and i feel like it adds a layer of security.
Everything has some sort of top:
Slacktop, craptop, proxtop, oldtop, wifetop, and batocera (because I keep forgetting to ssh in and change it).
I’ve had good luck with these guys: https://cloudfanatic.net/pricing/
I think they would fall in the less resources category. But they offer unlimited data transfer, and you can use any distro you want. I run slackware btw.