• 2 Posts
  • 101 Comments
Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: December 28th, 2023

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  • N0x0n@lemmy.mltoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldMozilla grants Ente $100k
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    7 days ago

    Nobody ever talking about lychee ?

    Yes okay it’s not GPL or written in a fancy new language (PHP is still alive xD). But it’s simple, elegant, no UX bloat, no ML or IA stuff… Just a plain simple self-hosted photo manager.

    One thing I really liked about it, you can import you external photo’s with .xmp files, just one checkbox away.

    The tag feature is simple but working as expected. Nothing fancy but it does best what’s it’s supposed to do !!

    Call me old boomer but I really like the simplicity of lychee. It’s a bit like how reading an article from miniflux or wallabag… Simple html files without bloating your eyes or your brain…

    Just my 2c, nothing to see here !






  • I have a self-hosted Baikal server with self-signed CA on Android 14 and it works.

    However, I didn’t had to add the certificate to Davx⁵ itself. Adding a rootCA into your device and your reverse proxy handling the request should work as expected over https.

    Those kind of things are difficult to troubleshoot, this could be:

    • Bad rootCA certificate, missing the necessary options ?
    • Wrong certificate handled by your reverse proxy ?
    • Radicale doesn’t recognize your certificate extension ?
    • Wrong networking configuration ?
    • Bug ?

    We need more infos about your setup:

    • Do you use a reverse proxy ?
    • Had you already any success with this certificate within an other application ?
    • Any logs from your Android, Davx⁵?




  • My first rm -r mistake was a hard pill to swallow… You think this only happens to others or because people don’t take time to look carefully their command…

    Nah… when you’re experimenting new things (grep, exclude certain files, piping other commands, relative path vs absolute, sed, regex…) It can easily do some strange things you didn’t expected beforehand.

    But hey that’s how you learn (I guess?). If everything would be perfect the first time you do something, the world would be annoying ? 😄





  • Yep, Debian for sure ! 3 years ago I settled for debian on an old spare laptop, It’s still cruisen with more than 21 containers !! Sure I had a few fresh installs because skill issues, lack of proper configuration, user mistakes… But it’s probably the easiest to maintain and learn as a beginner !

    No idea what’s your level and how close you’re with computers and how much time you have to spare, but don’t be afraid to make mistakes and try a few things out.

    If you are like me just a plain old geek who knew his way arround computers and used Hamachi back in the days, thinking you were a HAKKER… Get ready to get your ass kicked !

    While self-hosting and de-googling is fun, it also has alot of negative things:

    • Time consuming
    • Involves ALOT of Searxing/Reading
    • Debuggin (kinda…)
    • Learning the basics of at least 1 scripting language (consider bash your ally)
    • It’s an infinite rabbit hole that will suck you in and sometimes get to your nerves…

    One of the best advice I could give you along the way is, If you’re stuck on a bug or something isn’t working as expected in your setup and It seems you couldn’t find any answer or similar issues on the web, you absolutly have to take a break, not a 5min cigarette break… A few hours bicycle/sleep break !!!

    The next day you will for sure find a solution !!

    Good luck, have fun and don’t forget to take time for yourself and people arround you !


  • There is always going to be a divide between people who have done restaurant closings and those that haven’t.

    Naah every service that expects that “the client is king” philosophie have sentiment for all kind of people working in the same area.

    I mean, I did retail jobs a few years ago, and still today when I go shopping or at restaurants or any other service, I always chose my time accordinlgy to not bother them to much… Because I know how people can be stupid assholes…

    But from time to time you get some chill lovely creatures and that always brightened my day ☀️




  • You can always try out their free Tier.

    While you get limited bandwidth it’s really okayish for normal use. Do not try to connect over a peer2peer connection, it’s disabled in the free tier and your connection goes "Wooosh! *

    I’m very Happy with their free tier, I even route my mobile’s traffic through the same VPN connection with wireguard and some iptables.

    *Edit



  • N0x0n@lemmy.mltohomelab@lemmy.mlWhat are you running in your home network?
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    1 month ago

    Everything hosted on an old spare Asus gaming laptop (8 years old) via docker. I’m slowly thinking to invest in a N100 as more advanced routing capabilities and VM for my docker containers. Right now I can access all my services via Wireguard but want to expend it to make it available over my network.

    • Komga
    • Baikal
    • Linkding
    • Planka
    • Miniflux
    • Navidrome
    • Jellyfin
    • PiHole
    • Searxng
    • SFTPGO
    • Sonarr
    • Syncthing
    • Traefik
    • Vaultwarden
    • Wallabag
    • What’s up docker