I also recommend folks check out Dyson Sphere Program, I’ve sunk many hundreds of hours into it at this point
Just a guy doing stuff.
I also recommend folks check out Dyson Sphere Program, I’ve sunk many hundreds of hours into it at this point
Definitely has the right attitude for it!
Meanwhile, for my homelab I just use split DNS and a (properly registered+set up) .house
domain - But that’s because I have services that I want to have working with one name both inside and outside of my network
Yep, as someone who just recently setup a hyperconverged mini proxmox cluster running ceph for a kubernetes cluster atop it, storage is hard to do right. Wasn’t until after I migrated my minor services to the new cluster that I realized that ceph’s rbd csi can’t be used by multiple pods at once, so having replicas of something like Nextcloud means I’ll have to use object storage instead of block storage. I mean. I can do that, I just don’t want to lol. It also heavily complicates installing apps into Nextcloud.
Ok so even assuming $50/hr for the dev time, we’re still only talking $16,500
Certbot also does DNS challenge, fwiw
DNS challenge makes it even easier, since you don’t have to go through the process of transferring it yourself
Yep, gotta take out individual parts one at a time and transfer them over, but you have to do the assembly in roughly reverse order, which means disassembly, then assembly with the new case.
Thanks?
It wasn’t difficult to me, just time consuming really since I was taking it slow and keeping everything organized. I have all the appropriate tools for things like a screen swap and such though, along with the patience and expertise to do it safely - So I might not be the best person to answer about the difficulty in a way that would be true for others.
A company called ExtremeRate sells the case and button kits all as one - It took me around 5 hours to replace the shell on mine, but that’s largely because I was being meticulous and careful while also following a video tutorial that I had to keep pausing/resuming.
Now that I’ve done it once, I could probably do it in a half-hour though.
Here’s mine, I continue to adore it. I’ve been playing more on my GPD Win Mini since it arrived, but I can’t help love the Deck for some games.
Others have addressed the root and trust questions, so I thought I’d mention the “mess” question:
Even the messiest bowl of ravioli is easier to untangle than a bowl of spaghetti.
The mounts/networks/rules and such aren’t “mess”, they are isolation. They’re commoditization. They’re abstraction - Ways to tell whatever is running in the container what it wants to hear, so that you can treat the container as a “black box” that solves the problem you want solved.
Think of Docker containers less like pets and more like cattle, and it very quickly justifies a lot of that stuff because it makes the container disposable, even if the data it’s handling isn’t.
Ah, neat! I just looked it up and it does look useful.
I’ve never really had any trouble with dark reader speed-wise - though it gives one major bonus that no other extension has so far: Attempting to match the appearance of darkened websites to my system theme (Catppuccin)
I can’t tell if you’re agreeing with me, disagreeing with me, or suggesting some alternative
Missed the opportunity to go with ‘Horton Hears a Poo’
I highly recommend the Dark Reader extension for your browser
The solution for me is that I run Nextcloud on a Kubernetes cluster and pin a container version. Then every few months I update that version in my deployment yaml to the latest one I want to run, and run kubectl apply -f nextcloud.yml
and it just does its thing. Never given me any real trouble.
Dyson Sphere Program is dangerously replayable to me. Hundreds and hundreds of hours sunk into it