

I’m an idiot and never linked the link
https://www.smarthomebeginner.com/authentik-docker-compose-guide-2025/
I’m an idiot and never linked the link
https://www.smarthomebeginner.com/authentik-docker-compose-guide-2025/
The new NIST recommendations give a recommendation of at least a 64 character maximum.
Verifiers and CSPs SHOULD permit a maximum password length of at least 64 characters.
It doesn’t help our friends in the EU, but I’m hopeful that the CFPB’s “Open Banking” rules might actually make it possible to do this with an open source product with OAuth and common APIs rather than these aggregators that are just web scraping your bank.
I’ve heard others recommend Low End Box before but I have no experience, so do some due diligence before selecting any of these!
I started with the 2020 tutorial from these guys. They’ve updated it a few times through the years so I can’t speak to how good the new version is, but I’m sure it’s probably plenty to get started.
https://www.smarthomebeginner.com/traefik-v3-docker-compose-guide-2024/
After I followed this guide, I’ve deviated significantly as I learned and started to do my own thing. It’s a great place to start and learn the basics of containerized applications and once you have that then you can host most things that are dockerized. All I need to do now to start up a new service is pull up the README on Docker Hub (or better yet, if LinuxServer.io has a container that does what I want to do, on their website), figure out what I want to do with the variables and any setup that needs to happen, and then I add it to my .yml and start it up!
I’ve got it all tracked now on GitHub so I can see what I’ve changed and when and if something were to go wrong I could revert back to a known-good configuration.
Vaultwarden is only the server, no? So any clients that you use to access Vaultwarden are built and maintained by 8bit solutions a.k.a. Bitwarden, including the desktop client that is the subject of this post.
De-Googling was what got me started as well. Wanted to be able to have my own Google Drive clone with Nextcloud. From there it was just one little improvement / additional service at a time as I learned to use Linux and docker. Now I run a Linux laptop and am considering an android phone.
Engineering background for reference.
It was just always so annoying having to go into the iPhone keyboard punctuation twice for each domain
Man, some people have really thought of everything. I am so impressed.
Honestly, I learned a ton from these guys: https://www.smarthomebeginner.com/
I’ve diverged a good bit since then of the services I’ve added and the specifics of how I configure things (I still use Traefik whereas I think they’ve shifted to Nginx), but they have a great example of a GitHub repo and what it looks like to manage a self-hosted server.
For #2 and #3, it’s probably exceedingly obvious, but wish I would have truly understood ssh, remote VS Code, and enough git to put my configs on a git server.
So much easier to manage things now that I’m not trying to edit docker compose files with nano and hoping and praying I find the issue when I mess something up.
I could see an argument for companies that work with healthcare or government that have to have systems / software specifically audited / vetted / approved before use. But yeah you’re absolutely right, getting that far behind the times sounds like a nightmare when it does finally go EOL.
As much flak as they catch, you gotta hand it to Ubuntu for offering up to 12 years of support to companies willing to pay for it. It doesn’t make sense for anything but a paid service, but dang is it impressive.
What about New Outlook (New) with New in the icon?
How else are you to know which version you’re using??
More power to you! To each their own, I prefer most of the tweaks that Bluefin did and they make it pretty easy to turn off some of the more controversial ones.
It’s basically Silverblue but with all the nice to haves already built in. They try to make it extremely user friendly for install and then just using it without tweaks or having to add anything yourself
They recommend using brew
to install CLI apps. There are also dev containers and toolbx
, but the latter is not recommended.
I mean literally… example.com**/**index.html