Not only backups, but also migration
Not only backups, but also migration
That’s a great solution. (sarcasm)
For a quick question yes, but if you try to search a solution for a problem it’s actual hell, 1000s of BS messages and countless other problems just thrown in one timeline.
You can either search through it for hours or ask the question which was answered 10 times before.
It’s as inefficient as it gets
Double-NAT anyone? 3 times the fun, 2 times the work
I had some files which rot away over the years, who knows which update borked them, i use it as a cache for real backups for important files
True, when i respond with the exact problem it usually gets fixed, interestingly even explained why it failed.
Great for learning
There is more to it with garage doors, what about the current state of the door, do you only want to open it a little bit for more fresh air and close it afterwards, bonus, is a car in there
One relay doesn’t fix this, it is simple but not that simple
They are both hacky, but the Docker image is only handling the tasks you want it too, not the whole system, so if it goes haywire it’s not as bad.
I would also not recommend running essentially a cracked server OS handling maybe your most important files.
If you insist to use some Synology application there is this solution:
Nginx Proxy Manager does also manage certificates, it makes it even easier to create separate certificates for different subdomains, which is nice for my sanity.
I don’t like that anybody checking out one certificate of any service and get all the subdomains I’m running too, and wildcard certificates are bad practice.
I was running the LS.io Letsencrypt container as it was named before, and SWAG for years, without any problems, it does its job, but then i’ve tried NPM and it made my life easier, i love the ability to change access rules or proxy settings with some simple clicks too, without having to edit countless config files for simple changes everywhere, that’s what ultimately made me stay there.
The Arch User Repository is offering ROCm and yes, i tried it, it works
If you don’t mind it being completely Chinese based, Beelink with their new Intel 12th gen mini PC were my upgrade from the last Shuttle device I’ve used.
Dual Intel 2.5G NIC plenty of USB and an extremely efficient Intel Alder Lake-N100 with a great price to performance closed the deal for me.
EQ12-N100 is what i went for, to be exact, there are more powerful options too, if needed.
Nobody asked, nobody cares, just do it.
I don’t want a DE cluttered with 10k possible options which led to possible unstability. I want a stable DE and the ability to change it exactly how i want it.
The stability of KDE is there, but Gnome is much better. Good that we have the options
I don’t know, with Gnome extensions you menage to change anything you’d want to and even more.
Maybe not anything, but the options are there
What the actual… Thanks
Just use your DNS-server and forward it in your LAN to the internal IP
But they want to, that’s why they’re started
If you check it and run it through a course and a decent one year guarantee, you should be fine. If it doesn’t fail then it won’t fail for quite some time.
Just make sure to put it in some RAID or parity
I just swapped my >10 year old WD Reds with refurbished used drives at 1/3 of the price, just because i need more space, these things last if you take some care.