This. And to add to what other commenters have said, by using Bitwarden and paying for their Premium plan (very cheap, just $10/year), even if you don’t use all their features, you’re supporting a good project. It’s critical infrastructure, I think the price is more than fair.
Either way, you should always make periodic backups from any cloud service you use, encrypted of course.
tmpod
- 5 Posts
- 34 Comments
This is a good suggestion. Docker is more mature and has more resources, so it’s better to learn the ins and outs of containers. After getting comfortable with it, you can move to Podman and have a much better time tackling its peculiarities regarding permissions and rootless.
I used Docker for years and only recently decided to give Podman a try, porting my Lemmy instance to it.
I think security is a fair point, given caddy’s younger age compared to nginx, but I wouldn’t say it tried to do too much.
Why do you say that?
I’ve used both plenty and only once I thought Caddy was harder: caching. It requires you to install a plugin that also doesn’t have the easiest of configs. I think there’s a new and simpler one nowadays, but haven’t tried it yet.
I now use Caddy by default for everything new I make/host.
tmpod@lemmy.ptto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•Youtube replaced unicode emojis with fucking imagesEnglish
15·2 years agoThe web font would also be cached, and it wouldn’t be that big of a resource in the first place. I think being able to copy a comment’s content is more important, but whatever.
tmpod@lemmy.ptOPto
Technology@lemmy.ml•OpenSSH: race condition in sshd allows remote code execution
3·2 years agoTrue, an RCE is always a serious thing. Just saying it’s not exactly catastrophic like others have been more so.
tmpod@lemmy.ptOPto
Technology@lemmy.ml•OpenSSH: race condition in sshd allows remote code execution
4·2 years agoYeah, exactly. Very impracticable.
tmpod@lemmy.ptOPto
Technology@lemmy.ml•OpenSSH: race condition in sshd allows remote code execution
121·2 years agomusl isn’t vulnerable, as per https://fosstodon.org/@musl/112711796005712271
readme.com (aka readme.io) ain’t libre, but it has a free plan.
I also think it’s a bit on the heavy side, but what isn’t these days…
+1 for lemmy.readme.io, it’s much easier to read than a JS lib documentation.
tmpod@lemmy.ptto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Roses are red, violets are blue, everyone is using IPv6, why aren't you?
101·2 years agoI just upgraded my Lemmy instance’s hardware and finally got IPv6 support :D
It’s not open source but it’s quite literally the best Android application I’ve ever seen, by a significant margin. It’s from the good old days where apps were small, very well designed, very polished and did not collect data.
It’s FX, a gem ever more lost to time. The site is a bit old and unmaintained so SSL certificates may give you a bit of trouble, but you can just ignore the warnings, it’s just an info page.
FX, despite not receiving updates for years has so many features of such great quality, I’ve yet to find any alternative with a truly competing interface and feature set.
Been using it for 10 years and it has been the pinnacle of Android.
Edit: I know you’ll be detracted from trying it since it’s not FOSS, but seriously give it a shot.
Liftoff is basically a fork of the “old” Lemmur. It’s kinda sad they don’t even mention it anywhere on the repo :/ (they mention in the app’s about page)
tmpod@lemmy.ptto
Technology@beehaw.org•Mastodon thinks Lemmy’s privacy stinks. What say you?English
19·3 years agoI didn’t know anything about Raddle besides the name until now. But gosh, is that a needlessly toxic pit. There’s a poor guy there getting completely beaten up by an admin and some others which seem to be enjoying their time-wasting public bullying. Oh well…
tmpod@lemmy.ptOPto
Technology@beehaw.org•EU votes for smartphones having user-replaceable batteries by 2027English
2·3 years agomm you bring good points! hadn’t thought of how it would level the playing field
tmpod@lemmy.ptOPto
Technology@beehaw.org•EU votes for smartphones having user-replaceable batteries by 2027English
3·3 years agoDang, looking at those phones from back then, they were such good designs. Simple yet effective.
tmpod@lemmy.ptOPto
Technology@beehaw.org•EU votes for smartphones having user-replaceable batteries by 2027English
1·3 years agoI don’t see an issue, but perhaps nobody ever thought to really try shipping a device with something like that. Specially since the water proofing advent.
tmpod@lemmy.ptOPto
Technology@beehaw.org•EU votes for smartphones having user-replaceable batteries by 2027English
3·3 years agoYeah, exactly.





Yes! Oh my, I’m silly; that was precisely my point and I managed to mess it up 🙃
Thank you for the correction!