ditto
Cranky Old Man. Been working in IT for 25+ years. Mostly cyber security. Currently consulting SMB as vCISO.
ditto
I first tried zerotier but ran into some weird issue…don’t recall what it is now…and then tried tailscale and was up and running in like 15 mins. But I see others have had the absolutely opposite experience from mine where tailscale wouldn’t work and zerotier would. I think they’re both great products.
Always always always have 3 places where you store your data. Your main data store. Another storage location and then one offsite. And like others have said…check your backups occasionally to make sure you can successfully restore from them.
Thats funny. They have 4th of July sale but the black friday prices are better.
Like everybody else here said…audiobookshelf is da bomb. I had an audible subscription for a while and found myself without the time to really listen to enough audiobooks to make it worthwhile so I cancelled. I know I could still access the audiobooks I purchased but I’m always concerned with these companies suddenly having a disagreement with a publisher and nuking a whole pile of media I paid for so I figured out how to download my purchased audiobooks locally to be listened to via audiobookshelf. Worked great.
You could also look at not making anything available publicly and using something like tailscale to get access to your services.
I’ve used pretty much every distro under the sun since I started using Linux as my primary desktop in 2001. I’m actually running Garuda now on my laptop and main desktop machine and love it.
I think Garuda is rock solid stable (it’s Arch so of course it is). I haven’t found a software package not available easily.
Give it a try. If you don’t like it then try something else. Thats what makes Linux so great. There’s so many choices.
Was thinking of all the distros I’ve run over the years. I know this isn’t a complete list and not in any particular order…
and now Garuda.
I’ve been running Docker with Portainer for last few years. Been working great. Tried making the switch over to podman but couldn’t get it to work with Portainer (which a lot of people say it can) and had some issues with NFS shares. One day I’ll have to give it a try again.
First post in the world of Lemmy! Woot! Another Reddit escapee. I can’t for the life of me understand the management team at Reddit. I get that they need to make money and that they’re pissed off at the AI guys for pilfering their data but the people who contribute to the subreddits and moderate them for free are why Reddit is such a success. Why would you screw them over? It’s so short sited. If you’re pissed at OpenAI then talk to them and figure out how they can pay for your API access but don’t screw the people that made you a success. They can afford to spend a little of the VC/Microsoft money. Okay…off the soap box now…
Up until very recently I was running all my services on a HP DL380 Gen9 server. Beautiful server but sucks back electricity like a drunk on New Years Eve and is way too noisy for my office. Purchased 4 different Tiny PCs (3 Lenovos and 1 Dell).
One Lenovo (AMD Ryzen 3 PRO 2200GE with 32GB RAM) is running RockyLinux with Docker with 20+ containers currently running.
I’m constantly playing with different containers - adding, removing, etc. I did try making the switch to Podman as I like the idea of rootless containers but could not for the life of me get things like NFS shares and Portainer integration working and was spending way too much time fighting with it. Will probably try again in the near future.
Then the other 3 Tiny PCs are running XCP-NG with various VMs including my Xen Orchestra, Kali, a couple Windows machines (usually off), Tailscale gateway box and a few others. Again, mostly for testing things out.
Using OpnSense as my firewall. Have a TrueNAS system sharing files and another small Rockstor NAS also.
Looking forward to the community here. Thanks.
I look forward to Grumpy Old Geeks Podcast every week. Two old timers from the tech industry. tagline for the show is “What went wrong on the internet and whose to blame.”