Fuck chrome first of all, and second: why on steamdeck community?
A small almond sailing the internet on a paper boat.
Fuck chrome first of all, and second: why on steamdeck community?
Fair enough
I managed to selfhost the web interface, but I encountered an issue that I don’t think I can fix…
I used this docker run command (not compose yet, just testing)
docker run -it --rm --name stremio-web -p 8080:8080 node:alpine sh -c """ apk add git git clone https://github.com/stremio/stremio-web --depth 1 cd stremio-web npm install npm run build npm install -g http-server http-server build/ -p 8080 -d false """
And I can reach the web ui. Now I can go into the settings page and set the backend url, which works perfectly. But when I go to the discover page nothing loads because it wants to reach stremio’s own servers.
Note: To access my selfhosted services I use a firefox profile that doesn’t have access to the internet, to be able to fully seflhost my stuff, that’s why the connection to their servers is blocked.
Is there a way to proxy these remote connections from the backend or am I just lost at this point?
Aye, thank you!
I want one so bad but I don’t know what wattage I should get for it
I have been running Immich since v1.1 to this day, and it has been flawless
You’re right I edited it now, thankfully I’m not a web dev, that would’ve been embarrassing
I almost bought the N2, but had a feeling the N3 was coming out and waited
Best html status code
Note: it can be selfhosted
Terraria is just too good to be left like that
It is not exactly ecc, you should check it out, I don’t remember what was different
Oh, yea you’re right, it shouldn’t freeze your game
I wonder the same, how is it that pretty? Op what software did you use?
I feel like that is shader compilation happening on the fly, it should dissapear after an hour or so (when it all compiles).
Glad to see it 💪 Fuck Spez
Dude, same thing happened to me
That would be the plan, the NAS with ECC would run zfs with weekly scrubs (4 to 6 drives)
Edit: now running ECC on devices with critical data or databases
The fact that it is open source means it’s worth playing
occ files:scan --all (or something like that)