I use NGINX because it’s what I’m familiar with. If I was starting again, I would probably use Caddy.
I use NGINX because it’s what I’m familiar with. If I was starting again, I would probably use Caddy.
Using ‘hours of use’ as the metric, it would be Plex. The ones I use every day are Libreddit, TT-RSS, Huginn and Reddit-RSS - and my own journalling app and pocket clone.
Try a delivery test to an Outlook / Exchange server. I’ll be amazed if it goes through.
And episode 1 is currently free on Steam!
You need to change the line starting <path> in your docker compose file and make sure it reflects where the nginx internal config file actually is.
Mine is in the same folder as the compose file, so it’s ./nginx_internal.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
Such a fantastic book. It’s one of the few that I will read again and again.
I 100% agree here. Each instance should focus on a single topic. It makes no practical sense that there are multiple identical communities across different servers.
Same. Like, I’m relatively confident in the systems I have running, but not so confident that I’d trust them with my most important passwords.
PiVPN is great. Works on just as well on a standard server with Ubuntu.
All true. And RPIs aren’t even cheap anymore. It’s much more cost effective to buy a refurbished lease PC and get the extra processing power, expandability & reliable storage. I run everything on a HP elitedesk and it didn’t cost much over £150.
I’m relatively competent installing server software, but the Lemmy instructions completely flummoxed me. Their docker instructions just don’t work.
I ended up using the ansible docker scripts and filling out the blanks because I’m unfamiliar with ansible.
If this is as good as it sounds, you’re doing everyone a massive favour.
First I’ve heard of Boolwyrm. Looks neat!
Wallabag is what most people recommend, but I couldn’t get on with it.
I’ve been using the developer beta of WatchOS 10 and it’s been fine.