Yup, if you hand them your unlocked phone they can look through it.
Yup, if you hand them your unlocked phone they can look through it.
It’s basically 5 steps listed here https://immich.app/docs/install/docker-compose
If you’re new to docker it will seem like a lot, but they’ve taken care of most of the work for you already in the docker compose file.
mkdir immich && cd immich
wget -O docker-compose.yml https://github.com/immich-app/immich/releases/latest/download/docker-compose.yml
wget -O .env https://github.com/immich-app/immich/releases/latest/download/example.env
nano .env
and change the upload location if needed (by default it will be in the ‘immich’ directory we’re in) and the timezone.
docker compose up -d
Now it’s running on http://ip:2283/
Then to upgrade later on switch to the ‘immich’ directory again, do a docker compose pull
and docker compose up -d
Yup, watchtower will auto update docker containers for you.
Yup it should run fine since its a docker stack, synology supports docker.
I don’t understand how lemmy and fedi apps in general still have this problem, they never seem to be able to recognize a link and just show it on my home instance.
The bubble of AAA gaming and reviews/benchmarks definitely has that kind of thing going on. But you can really just ignore that subset entirely and have so many good games to play from smaller studios and devs.
It’s not really a new thing, I remember when Crysis came out and it was all about the graphics and hardware to run it the fastest.
RAID means that if a drive fails you don’t have some downtime while your backups restore. It depends on how you feel about waiting for that.
Basic Brother black and white lasers come with only a USB connection and are really cheap to operate. Also no special drivers required.
Most multiplayer games now seem to focus on matchmaking and your performance, there’s not much focus on community anymore.
Everyone just plays for the highest score and doesn’t care about hanging out on a community run server every night with the same group of people.
skykick
Wtf is this? Their website is awful.
$12 per mailbox is a crazy high price.
He doesn’t have a good reputation for his videos or products that I’ve seen, they come across as very scammy and he has a very ‘podcast snakeoil scammer’ feel. I would avoid it.
Better off buying a Google Pixel, the older ones are cheap now.
dockers volume storage is bloody annoying to backup
They’re just normal folders located in /var/lib/docker/volumes
so you can back up that directory.
Backup for docker is no different than backing up anything else.
Volumes are located in /var/lib/docker/volumes
by default, so just back up that directory with Restic or Borg, or something like Backrest if you want notifications and stuff handled for you.
Or you can do mount points to a directory instead of using volumes and back that up, but it’s really the same process.
What does libre mean?
None of the alternatives are good enough yet. Either the UX is bad, or they are missing important features, or both in most cases. There is too much focus on privacy and encryption and not enough on being easy to use, and having the features people are used to.
Asking friends on Discord to switch to Matrix which is missing most of the features and bots they are used to is not going to work out. Same for Telegram to Signal or Matrix when they’re used to group chats, channels, stickers, bots to handle moderation of new users, polls, forwarding of messages, stories, and so on.
None of the Discord ‘alternatives’ that come up seem to support game streaming with low latency, some don’t even have voice rooms yet, they’re just a text chat with a meeting room feature tacked on.
Docker is generally the easiest to install and update, and won’t disturb other existing applications.
I’m confused because the article talks about self hosting on a VPS and how many self hosted services could stand up to legal action?
That sounds like it’s describing running a public service for others. Self-hosting IMO is running something for yourself, it doesn’t even need to be on the public internet 99% of the time.
Running a service for others is just plain old hosting.
It’s basically the minimum level of redundancy you should have for storing important data.
3 total copies, 2 different types of storage, 1 of them offsite.
Backups also need to be tested like twice a year or so, do a restore as a test (full if you can, but partial is something at least) and make sure the data is what you expect.
I’m a fan of separating services when possible.
And emails are a huge pain to change, so it might be worth considering an email service with your own domain name.
Funko and their “partner” should be fined for fraud.