

You can fix these things with Linux. That’s the magic of it. While it’s not as polished as other OSes (unlike others here keep insisting) you are actually able to fix almost every problem yourself. And while doing it you learn a thing or two.


You can fix these things with Linux. That’s the magic of it. While it’s not as polished as other OSes (unlike others here keep insisting) you are actually able to fix almost every problem yourself. And while doing it you learn a thing or two.


People can’t be experts at everything. If the IT industry is on big parts build on deception and lies it’s not the user’s fault that they don’t have the time to learn about these systems when everyday life gives them more then enough to care about. You most definitely don’t fully understand every aspect of life you partake in and based on that you also most definitely make bad choices on a regular basis.


Stop shifting the goal post


Sure but without extra measures the same plus a lot of more data is just sold by all the other companies and chances are your VPN company is just taking over the role of your ISP. If you want to browser somewhat more privately try to reduce your fingerprint first before trusting some VPN company just because they say so.


Websites don’t need your IP to accurately remember you and track you. Using a VPN only helps when you want to hide stuff from your ISP, nothing else.


Isn’t Valve working on a compatibility layer for running Android apps on linux? Also there is Waydroid which runs Android apps in containers at pretty decent speed.


Looking only at the web page it is obvious he let AI completely take over the wheel. Even if the whole “banned for frog emoji” origin story would not smell like utter BS I wouldn’t trust any of my data or resources to this creation.


I’m not only weirded out by the AI features. I also just don’t want to appear in some random persons video. It does not matter if the camera is in a smartphone or a wearable. It is insane to me how many people do not respect the privacy of others in this regard.
What the hell is “linux certified” hardware? Why would an average user install arch? Is this a troll post? Are you a real person?


They did not “choose” it as an official tool for internal communication. It was her private phone with a by her installed Signal. Besides that: Phishing can happen on any platform, especially one that is available to the public. Signal is not issue here and swapping email registration against verification by mobile phone number won’t solve anything.
Running multiple Proxmox hosts in a cluster makes sense so you can swap VMs from one the other and have extra hardware reliability. I’d also get grouping your containers on different Docker VMs the apply the same security rules to containers in a group (internally vs. externally available for example). But how does a faulty Immich container take down a Plex container?
What is your reason for running two separate Debian docker hosts with under 5 containers in total? That seems like quite the overhead? And why did you choose to install Nextcloud on your TrueNAS server?


I still wouldn’t like if my hobby had me troubleshooting every other week. I speak from experience when I say it’s no fun having to constantly fix your homelab after a busy work day. I just want something reliable. Especially when it’s handling a lot of personal and important data.


It’s being posted all over Lemmy…?


That seems like an unreliable high maintenance choice for a server.


Proxmox as Hypervisor and for VMs just Debian.


If you use something like Navidrome to host your own streaming service you can set up automatic transcoding and enable it on your phones streaming client (I use Symfonium). This way I can always access my whole library at any point with it not using too much of my mobile data. But my flac collection is quite big and even if transcoded completely I could not fit all of it on my phones internal storage.


Oh he knows. There are several quotes from him acknowledging that he is evil. He does not care as long as it supports his vision for the future.


Vaultwarden is specifically used for self hosting. Setting up a Wireguard VPN on your server at home can be tricky in specific instances. Most of the time it’s dead simple though. Installing a Wireguard Client on your mobile devices is as simple as scanning a QR code. And to be fair: If you’re going to expose the Vaultwarden instance to the internet why not just use the official Bitwarden service then? I’m sure they can handle security better than someone who has trouble setting up an VPN server.
What’s the point of posting here then if not hoping to find a way to fix it? Me and probably a lot of others here are happy to help. But for that we need some Journal-Output for example.