Today is still 4/1, so I’m going to wait until at least tomorrow before I form an opinion on this.
Also find me on db0 and lemmy.world!
https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/u/lka1988
https://lemmy.world/u/lka1988
Today is still 4/1, so I’m going to wait until at least tomorrow before I form an opinion on this.
I use a few of those already (HA, Proxmox, etc), I’ll have to check it out later.
Ntfy’s public server costs money. Something that’s need-to-know when suggesting an app to someone who’s curious about its functionality.
I already have a small cluster that I run shit on, so that’s they way I would take.
I poked around and it’s a bit more involved than that.
My only beef with LubeLogger (and it’s a pretty minor one, given it’s just the one dev) is the lack of a mobile app. I’ve used aCar since 2012. I have years of data logged, and IMO, having periodic reminders and widgets available at a single tap is a bit more favorable than a PWA.
I am very curious about ntfy though. Please do share.
I run this on a simple docker instance.
I have several NFS shares that host multiple docker volumes. So yes.
Fuck Teams, all my homies hate Teams
Sounds like you’re pretty familiar already! I use OMV for my NAS and have several NFS shares for various services. It’s a solid solution IMO.
First and foremost: Do not expose your host system or the OMV admin interface to the internet. Ever. Doing so is only asking for trouble. Only expose services that have been properly isolated from the rest of the network and host system. Everything else you can access via VPN, or locally.
Secondly: OpenMediaVault beginner’s guide by DB Tech. Him, Craft Computing, Hardware Haven, and a few others whose names currently escape me, are all solid sources for learning how to host things at home.
After OMV, I would start with learning Docker and other containerization methods, and VMs.
Go outside and talk to several random people. That’s the average person.
Yes, but the average person doesn’t give a shit about the technical definition. You know what is meant, don’t be pedantic about it.
Some laptops (Thinkpads in particular) are capable of limiting the battery level via a Linux application called tlp
so it doesn’t go pop when plugged in 24/7.
Freeware = Free software
Technically true.
Ah yes, another one saved from the orphan crushing machine 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
There are root apps that can limit battery charge level. If you have an older phone that’s rootable, I would look into that.
The VM eats through the battery, that’s the only hangup I have with this. Otherwise that’s a fantastic idea.
That first part is why I still maintain my Google Photos account. I have most of it on Immich at this point, but given that’s still in active development, I like having options.
That’s a solid 3rd party use case. I’m setting it up on my cluster right now.
The only thing I’m really questioning is the removal of the Archos devices. I’m sure if this is legit then there are reasons for it, but those devices essentially started the entire Rockbox project.