Yeah, with their web installer it took like ten minutes with little to no input from the user on a fresh phone.
Yeah, with their web installer it took like ten minutes with little to no input from the user on a fresh phone.
Never gonna get safe roads for cycling if nobody cycles. Its an unfortunate chicken/egg problem
Yeah, I’m just saying with Arch the tweaking is a feature, not a bug. You can get the same UI with something far more plug and play using something like Debian Stable or even Mint if you like Cinnamon. I’m an openSUSE stan myself but thats just because I like to experiment, break things, and then roll my system back.
Well yeah, rolling release distros inherently require more fixing because you get all of the software as it is patched with far less testing for conflicts. If you want something you have to fix less get a stable release
Wow, as much as $3000? As opposed to the comparably affordable price of a car.
I’m glad! Halfway through writing that I got worried it was a little opaque. Best of luck setting it up. If I can do it, anyone can!
Basically you have to run a mini server (I use a docker container) called a cloudflare endpoint. From there you just enter the IPs and keys that your cloudflare account tells you to in the tunnel creation menu, and it all pretty much connects from there.
Then, on the cloudflare side, you make different subdomains point to local ports. So, for example, for connecting to qbittorrent web client, in the cloudflare menus I can make qbit.domain.example point to localhost:8080. In this case, it means “localhost” relative to the cloudflare access point you’ve made (which in my case can use localhost because its hosted on the same machine as my other docker containers, but if they are on different machines you can use local IP addresses).
I use their free plan, which is all you need if you’re just serving web content to a small number of users. You might need a domain to do this, but I don’t recall.
My layman’s understanding is you basically make cloudflare be the router, so their server/ports are what is exposed to the open internet rather than your local router.
Any of you guys tried Floorp? I’ve been using it for a few months now as my daily driver and while it might not be as intentionally lean as Waterfox, I find its customisability more than makes up for it.
It can be pretty secure if you host it behind a cloudflare tunnel. Then you don’t have to open any ports to the wild west
The difference between Mass Effect Legendary edition working better than it did on my windows machine and hanging on the launcher forever is literally whether or not I have a controller turned on & connected. I don’t know if I would have ever figured it out if it wasn’t for a random poster on ProtonDB
I don’t know why, only what lol
Looks like connections are onion-routed and it has its own built-in discovery
Blocked, unblocked, then blocked again recently.
One of the largest instances, lemmy.world, is no longer receiving posts from this community. They’re worried about legal troubles I think?
I pay for it, the results are quality and the fact that my brain doesnt have to sift through ad results and can just look at the real data is so nice. Additionally, they have a large number of “lenses” which can change the scope of your search. For example, they have a lens for searching lemmy as well as lenses for the “small web”, which filters out all the results from massive corporate websites and gives way more personal project sites and the like.
All in all I’m a fan.
I’ve seen a lot of inconsistency in charger shapes for different ebikes I’ve used. I wonder how they decided which charging heads to provide?
Poor, if my google search results are anything to go by
I use Kagi’s “Fediverse Search” lens and I’ve found it to work quite well for finding posts that I sort of remember and want to find again