

There’s a dead man option.
There’s a dead man option.
If I get hit by a bus, then the passwords for the things that my wife needs to settle things gets sent to her, and the infra isn’t something that I maintain and could be down.
Worth $10/yr, by far.
Well, when I moved to the AIO, the documentation was plain wrong on several points. I submitted a bunch of changes that I had to do to make it work and they worked those changes in for the most part. Now it seems pretty workable, as a friend of mine used it to set his instance up and said it seemed to go fairly smoothly.
And here I am having used it for a decade and perfectly happy. I try other ones like Owncloud every once in a while and find them lacking. It was slow once upon a time but if you changed to postgres and used redis, it improved immensely. Today it’s quite fast and the sync has been working great for a long time.
Use docker-compose with the AIO and it’ll be a lot easier to manage. There’s example compose files in the github repo.
I’ve been using the Collabora option for the mastercontainer since the start of the AIO, it’s worked well for my users.
This is the way.
Commute gone down?
I listen a lot because I’m either working where I need ear defenders and so I listen on BT headphones, or I’m in a combine/tractor. I’d be bored AF without podcasts.
Dammit, that’s one of my favorite podcasts.
Support had been dwindling and ad revenue is nearly non-existent for Linux podcasts, so I totally understand why. Still, too bad. I guess I’ll bump my donation to Late Night Linux since I can’t really find another self-hosted podcast that’s worth listening to.
I can get notification to ntfy, but I’m not sure if the app is certain to blow my phone up until I notice it, which is my goal. Frankly, if I could trigger the Presidential Alert, I would do that.
The application isn’t 100% likely to stay active in the background it seems. I tried to program one myself but there’s a lot of bullshit going on in background apps in Android that I’m not familiar enough with to trust that I can do any better.
Any suggestions for services that do that? I like the idea, I’d actually get a few different phones to ring if some of the alarms were to get triggered.
This is my summer solar system. I like to winter in the Antares.
There is a guide in the Mail cow docs on integrating Roundcube, that’s the client I use for my stack.
I’m not sold on GLinet’s implementation of OpenWRT. I have 3 of them in production, and all three need regular reboots to stay working. I like the VPN interface they have and the ability to get to the underlying Luci interface, but I’ve found just flashing my own device to have a more stable and deterministic result.
I can’t speak to VLANs in specific, because I haven’t trusted them enough after seeing the rest of it to use it anywhere critical enough that I use VLANs.
I’m trying to figure out how to add it to Mailcow Dockerized and hook the existing containers. If I sort it out, I’ll probably PR it to Mailcow. I think it would a nice addition to start to build out a network that isn’t susceptible to the same spam attacks as regular email (yet).
I remember as a kid I set up one of the first private Echomail nodes as part of my RBBS bulletin board. UUCP was a big part of that, as I was the hop for other nodes coming onboard in my area. I added another half-dozen modems eventually just to handle the email traffic, then had to offload it to a university because I didn’t want to have to charge for the traffic and it was getting too big to handle. But it was pretty interesting at the time.
On Error Resume Next
I mustn’t be communicating well, but that’s fine.
OK, yah, that’s what I was getting at.
If you start up the content server in Calibre, you can connect to it with any OPDS compatible ereader app.