I once was fixing someones computer booting with Bluescreen, because Windows 7 thought it found newer drivers for USB 3.1, and those newer were causing BSOD
I once was fixing someones computer booting with Bluescreen, because Windows 7 thought it found newer drivers for USB 3.1, and those newer were causing BSOD
modern anti cheats work under linux right now, from what I know
Lul, leftist memes are getting really cringe, is this facebook?
That probably depends on your vps provider (if using vps). Hosting exit node at home is clearly a bad idea.
Check this (mind that this not have to fresh enough): https://community.torproject.org/relay/community-resources/good-bad-isps/
Damn, seeing latest commits to branch I guess it it time for another update of my instance.
Yeah, currently it is bad time for computing power donations.
I think I need to do something similar with my cloud. It seem good both for organizing my cloud and for plain visual organizing training.
My config files are my documentation, but what is not suitable to be written in config files I write in selfhosted BookStack
I would not recommend docker-compose for a begginer. As first, one should learn basics, then optionally switch to docker-compose to automate stuff he already know. Also bind mount volumes are a better solution for long term storage than default volumes, since docker will never delete those, and their path in host system is configurable.
Technically any connection made from inside your local network can expose it to the outside world for someone outside. Browsing web, some nasty js and here you go.
I personally have some stuff hosted on my home hardware, cant share details obviously, but even the ip address of those services is not my home ip address. Also extensive use of rootless containers and other cool stuff is making me want to keep things like that.
Stable release seem a really good idea to help bigger instances keep stable, as that is what users probably want. Meanwhile mine likely will follow devel branch :]
A living proof how apt can be dangerous.
Don’t even try installing steam or you loose all your gpu drivers and stuff.
using apt for managing all system packages seem like a security flaw. If it get corrupted or run badly, whole OS can be destroyed.
Nextcloud is reall nice but if you are using many of its functions,. For just calendar it seem a bit to heavy, isn’t it?