

Just stick with OMV, its solid.
Also find me on db0 and lemmy.world!
https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/u/lka1988
https://lemmy.world/u/lka1988


Just stick with OMV, its solid.


Fair point.


accusing people forking their code of theft
AGPL 3.0 license
Too fucking bad, pussy.


Something something FUCKING BASSISTS


Remember kids, when trying to nail a specific guitar tone, start with the thing that actually creates the audible sound you hear: THE SPEAKER!


Anecdotal: I like like my OG UDM. Bought it the year it came out. No issues in almost 7 years.
Unifi is one of those brands where this phrase applies: “when it works, it works really good.”
People will see those comments, buy the hardware, and some of them will have bad experiences. You will hear about those bad experiences way more often than someone who hasn’t had any issues with the same hardware in the same timeframe.
That’s how it is with pretty much every consumer-focused network equipment brand.
They walked it back for now. It’s gonna come back. They’ve already shown they were willing to cross the line, and they will do it again.
Proxmox isn’t really comparable to Docker (or its 3rd party webui frontends) and was never meant to directly run user-facing services. Proxmox simply provides the virtual infrastructure required to host VMs and LXCs that will run your desired services.
IMO, Dockge (not a typo) is a far cleaner and easier solution than Portainer. Its very simple to set up and can easily link to other Dockge instances on other Docker hosts (I have like 4 or 5 VMs just for Docker). It also doesn’t bury your compose files deep inside a specific Docker volume that only allows its own container to access…like Portainer does.
That’s why they’re asking here.
I use Syncthing to sync my database between my laptops, desktop, work computer, personal phone, work phone, and my NAS (which gets everything and is set to never delete anything). NAS is backed up weekly, and the password database is also backed up to a few trusted cloud services.


That’s just Samsung’s version of “recovery mode”. Pretty much every Android device operates this way.


It is a huge problem here, unfortunately.


Not in the US they aren’t.


It is apparently regulatory hell to get up and running.
By design, of course.


I think you might be misunderstanding something here, because this is already how every ISP works - including the one you are using right now. Just on a bigger scale.


No thanks, double-NATing is not my idea of fun when it comes to self-hosting.


Yo wtf


Daniel’s paranoia is arguably the driving force behind Graphene’s security.
That’s a neat little tool! I’ve been looking for something like this
I deleted my linkedin account (as much as they would allow, anyway). I visited about twice a year, usually on accident.
Good riddance.