Any resources you’d recommend?
Any resources you’d recommend?
I suspect that it goes down and stays down whenever there is an app update, but I haven’t confirmed it yet.
Does the plain wireguard app stay up during updates?
if the cameras don’t load, open Tailscale and make sure it’s connected
I’ve been using Tailscale for a few months now and this is my only complaint. On Android and macOS, the Tailscale client gets randomly killed. So it’s an extra thing you have to manage.
It’s almost annoying enough to make me want to host my services on the actual internet… almost… but not yet.
I’ve seen the status code in a JSON response before: https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/json_api/v1/status-codes#401-unauthorized
One reason I can think of for including it is that it may make it easier for the consumer to check the status code if it’s in the JSON. Depending on how many layers of abstraction you have, your app may not have access to the raw HTTP response.
Although, yeah you lose the single source of truth though.
Neat. I’ve been getting more curious about WebDAV recently. Also, great website! Thanks for posting!
Would this cause a problem? I’m assuming this would be deserialized to the same value, no?
Yeah! It’s been great for me. No detection issues or weird bugs. The mobile and TV apps are also great!
Oooh, interesting. Thanks!
Yeah, they were definitely down again: https://lemmy.today/post/23792488
And they definitely got spammed again.
Yep. I got tagged on some racist issue last night. Stupid.
Ooooh, related: https://www.piki.nyc/
Using Piki data, we find that while the like rate increases monotonically with artist popularity on Spotify, this does not hold true for superlike rates
This company’s product seems to be music recommendations. We need something like this, but open source and federated.
Being able to direct my own reccomender system, in order for it to be alligned with my goals and not with my addictive tendencies
AGREE! There are options for controlling the data side of things, Lemmy, Mastodon, Jellyfin, torrents, but I’ve definitely noticed the recommendation side of things is basically non-existent. What I miss the most from Spotify or Netflix isn’t the music or movies, it’s the recommendations. There’s a ton of content outside the megacorps, but we don’t have a good way to find it.
It would be awesome if we had an algorithm that we could control. We could tune it to whatever we want, instead of letting these giant megacorps shove their shit in front of us.
I like that Migadu gives you a ton of control over your email experience. You can create unlimited users, have unlimited domains, create unlimited aliases, sending identities, they have custom routing features, etc. The backend/management panel seems like it was made with techies in mind. The actual email users don’t have to worry about any of those knobs though.
two guys running email?
Is it? I can’t tell from the about me. It says “In 2014, two of us, Michael Bruderer and Dejan Strbac, started…”, but nothing else on the page talks about the size of the company. It started as two people, but is it currently two people? Anyone know?
no 2FA support
The webmail client does have 2FA, but when connecting via client there is no 2FA. Although, not sure what this would look like. Would you enter a TOTP every time you want to connect to the IMAP server? Or do you mean more like an OAuth2 flow, like Gmail, and that asks for your TOTP?
I actually haven’t gotten around to playing with purelymail. Not sure if they handle this differently. What service are you thinking about?
purelymail, or if one guy running email by himself makes you feel uncomfortable, migadu
Ah, ok. I was barking up the wrong tree.
I tried a random Writefreely instance and it was extremely barebones and had poor markdown styling. It gave me the impression that Writefreely is more for publishing short stories, rather than technical content.
(Is that the point of Writefreely?)
Yeah, you’re right. Bad advice actually. Oops.
Shortcut: use Tailscale to create your own private network and avoid hosting on the big, bad Internet. Otherwise, you really have to be careful on how you protect your services.
Minor downside (or upside) is that you’ll have to install the Tailscale app on each device you want to make part of the network.
This made hosting at home a lot easier for me.
Update: Ah! I misread the post. Tailscale doesn’t make sense for this use case. My bad! 😅
Holy moly, I did not know this existed! Thanks! Just turned this on!