![](/static/be9a2c79/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/CJ7moKL2SV.png)
dude I say nuke when I microwave things
dude I say nuke when I microwave things
Cost billions and have 10 year lead times?
Use any old computer you have lying around as a server. Use Tailscale to connect to it, and don’t open any ports in your home firewall. Congrats, you’re self-hosting and your risk is minimal.
Dude, life is too short to wash spoons with your hands
🍾
You’re allowed to be happy sometimes. This is a win, enjoy it
DDG for me, but mostly I use !wi and !gh. Pretty rare to do a rawdog search
second time doesn’t take two days, but yeah you’re right.
Those two days aren’t really spent configuring, they’re spent learning.
If you roll a 1% chance of dying every day, you don’t make it to your first birthday
If people wanna steal my code they can steal it, it’s why I publish it. It’s not that good anyway
I don’t agonize over every line of public code or anything, I just make it reasonably maintainable and generalized enough to be useful to people who aren’t me. If it’s a throwaway bash script with hardcoded paths and such, why would I put it up anywhere?
Not really, If it’s throwaway then I don’t publish it anywhere.
My open source work is published under my real name because I feel like if someone is running my code, they should know who I am? Also it helps with my CV and such. I don’t go into politics or anything controversial though, keep it pretty professional.
Ubuntu is dead
Kinda showed your ass with this one
It’s a gag, I promise. He’s talked about it on their podcast
The guy who wrote it is the editor-in-chief.
As a straight dude, I concur
First I’d ask if you need to open ports at all - if this is only for your family’s use then Tailscale or one of its alternatives can accomplish the same goal without opening ports in your firewall or worrying about security flaws in your hosted services.
If it’s for public use, maybe consider cloudflare tunnel?
Personally I use miniflux, which has been amazing. It offers the fever and Google reader APIs, which many phone apps can talk to which means the UI can be almost whatever you want (I’m using reeder on iOS)
It supports all the feed formats, but for sites that don’t offer a feed you’ll need some other solution like kill-the-newsletter.com
Docker and docker-compose are nice because every service you want to run follows the same basic pattern. You don’t need much documentation beyond the project docs and the compose files themselves
Edit: caddyserver can do automatic certs, even behind a firewall if you set up the api call method. Varies by registrar