But Syncthing Fork is not shut down and is still maintained (never used the main version tbh).
https://github.com/Catfriend1/syncthing-android-fdroid
https://f-droid.org/packages/com.github.catfriend1.syncthingandroid/
But Syncthing Fork is not shut down and is still maintained (never used the main version tbh).
https://github.com/Catfriend1/syncthing-android-fdroid
https://f-droid.org/packages/com.github.catfriend1.syncthingandroid/
I’ve used Joplin before which was okay-ish (but borked the e2e encryption during an update).
Now I would recommend Silverbullet if you are really keen on self hosting a notes app.
But the notes that work best for me is simply Obsidian + Syncthing-Fork (you could self host a syncthing server), thanks to its sheer ability to adapt to nearly any use case thanks to its plugin.
Time for the EU to rip him a new one :)
Check out beszel, nearly no setup needed.
The easiest solution I found and use is Beszel.
https://github.com/henrygd/beszel
Just a hub with the most important stats and some simple agents on the servers.
alias vim=“nano”
Used to? What are you running now?
Part of self hosting is to decide yourself what you want or need.
I am very happy with Beszel (https://github.com/henrygd/beszel) as it is enough for my use case.
That being said compatibility is huge in the GrafProm Stack. A lot of software has Prometheus compatible end points which can then be visualised with Grafana.
Want to know how many requests are hitting your server? Count Diamond blocks mined per player on a Minecraft server? Want to track your weight and workout time? Or do you want to count yellow cars driving by your house? Grafana & Prometheus got you.
I’ve recently found Beszel and i want to use it to replace my grafana/Prometheus/node exporter stack. It seems to be a rather easy & clean solution. Sure, you can do more with grafana and Prometheus but I can’t be bothered having to learn that, when all I want is some simple monitoring.
You just have to trust the source. Sometimes that’s
easy, likeRed Hat, andsometimesthat’s hard.
FTFY
I am curious just how many people would notice that (or the usage of the microtype package vs without).
I know of one professor in my college who dabbled in typography and was usually spot on when it came to something like this but I’ve never heard the others talk about it.
Thanks for this post. I’ve been working with Interfaces on Red Hat nodes this week and I’ve already wondered what the hell is going on there.
As it is run by volunteers, they probably want to keep corporate (or domain hoarders) off their platform unless they pay.
Even when you host a HUGE static website (e.g. maps with thousands of image files). You can just throw it on R2 add a few transform rules, point a domain at it, and you are done. Also highlights the usability of Cloudflare compared to other solutions.
only free/cheap and usable DNS host
Check out desec.io als an alternative
Absurdly safe.
[…] Ceph
For me these two things are exclusive of each other. I had nothing but trouble with Ceph.
Very confused by the answers here. Anyway, check this list: https://github.com/anderspitman/awesome-tunneling
I personally used frp many years ago and it worked great.
Pretty much however you want. You can let it import and sort by a folder logic of your design or can make it read an already existing library without immich modifying the structure.
Sure, me too. That’s why…