@aihorde@lemmy.dbzer0.com Draw for me a pink dragon in a bikini eating a car on the beach
@aihorde@lemmy.dbzer0.com Draw for me a pink dragon in a bikini eating a car on the beach
@aihorde@lemmy.dbzer0.com Draw for me a Lemmy user typing a request for a picture and laughing at the great results
aihorde@lemmy.dbzer0.com Draw for me a Lemmy user typing a request for a picture and laughing at the great results
Yeah, that’s a big limitation.
Oracle is awesome in this one specific way. They suck in all other ways but this is really good.
That’s how I felt with KDE 1 and 2. I left it alone for a while and recently came back to KDE 5 after getting a steam deck and now I’ve switched my desktop to it.
I use portainer, and when I deploy an image, I write a short bash script for it.
This lets me easily do updates. I have a script for each image I run, it’s less than a dozen. They’re all from public repositories.
There’s a reason they call ‘dd’ Data Destroyer!
Ok, this should be pretty easy then. Just set up an instance in a cloud service provider (Oracle has lots of free stuff for this) and set up wireguard. Establish a VPN connection to your cloud server and port forward from there.
If you do know how to protect that open port then this should be pretty straightforward.
@aihorde@lemmy.dbzer0.com Draw for me a Lemmy user typing a request for a picture and laughing at the great results