Interesting. I actually thought of it as a replacement for Google. With Google search being broken for years it’s the only easy way to get information now.
Interesting. I actually thought of it as a replacement for Google. With Google search being broken for years it’s the only easy way to get information now.
What are your duties? You’re going to have a lot of duties but you will be able to unload your duties on the people below you.
And his show Last Man Standing was a blatantly obvious Republican. I didn’t mind the show though because his kids were Democrat and they were a foil to him.
That’s what neural networks are now. We do not know how it works under the hood. We just feed it training data.
It’s just a news link about a politician who said some terrible shit on porn sites.
He goes on there to promote stuff because no one of substance is in his echo chamber on TS.
Is it sad that I actually can’t tell if this is real or not?
Oh no! Not boobies. My impressionable mind!
Well…That almost makes it too simple.
I think that’s because legally it can’t be called bread because of the sugar.
My cat is my rubber duck. I get some weird looks from her.
She’s actually his wife.
That’s why I’ve been using Emby. Works just fine for free.
What else would they scrape your data for? Sure some could be for personal use but most of the time it will be to redistribute in a new medium. Like a recipe app importing recipes.
I only use it for reverse proxies. I still find Apache easier for web serving, but terrible for setting up reverse proxies. So I use the advantages of each one.
I updated my comment above with some more details now that I’m not on lunch.
Reverse proxy is actually super easy with nginx. I have an nginx server at the front of my server doing the reverse proxy and an Apache server hosting some of those applications being proxied.
Basically 3 main steps:
Setup up the DNS with your hoster for each subdomain.
Setup your router to port forward for each port.
Setup nginx to do the proxy from each subdomain to each port.
DreamHost let’s me manage all the records I want. I point them to the same IP as my server:
This is my config file:
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name photos.my_website_domain.net;
location / {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:2342;
include proxy_params;
}
}
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name media.my_website_domain.net;
location / {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8096;
include proxy_params;
}
}
And then I have dockers running on those ports.
root@website:~$ sudo docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
e18157d11eda photoprism/photoprism:latest "/scripts/entrypoint…" 4 weeks ago Up 4 weeks 0.0.0.0:2342->2342/tcp, :::2342->2342/tcp, 2442-2443/tcp photoprism-photoprism-1
b44e8a6fbc01 mariadb:11 "docker-entrypoint.s…" 4 weeks ago Up 4 weeks 3306/tcp photoprism-mariadb-1
So if you go to photos.my_website_domain.net that will navigate the user to my_website_domain.net first. My nginx server will kick in and see you want the ‘photos’ path, and reroute you to basically http://my_website_domain.net:2342. My PhotoPrism server. So you could do http://my_website_domain.net:2342 or http://photos.my_website_domain.net. Either one works. The reverse proxy does the shortcut.
Hope that helps!
Off-site backups that are still local is brilliant.
Oh shit. Does that stand for file system?
No. It looks like they only made it to the 2nd mission.