thanks! checking it out
thanks! checking it out
Just the other day I was thinking if i could run a mini games server on a raspberry pi. All the flash games growing up in a local device would be pretty darn awesome for the kids. would this help accomplish that?
This is why opensource developers get burnt out. If you don’t like it, fork it. Stop shoehorning what you want on other people’s project, especially for petty things like this.
that doesn’t stop them from uploading things in the background.
It works fine for where I am but using a privacy friendly alternative is going to come with downsides, as it depends heavily on crowd sourced data.
Searching sucks big time for me too, as locations are not written in english here, you have to assume what the english transliteration might be. I just start with short close matches, and that usually works out after a little bit of digging. Google maps usually gives out most searched locations right away and often that’s you’re looking after.
We can only hope It will get better as more people start using it
it’s free until oracle decides to shut it down without warnings. Then everything goes poof
what’s with that? without mentioning why they suck, that’s just the ol’ “trust me, bro”
Doesn’t KDE Connect do the same and more?
You get a raspberry pi. Then you get a durable SD card. You make the card bootable with the appropriate tool on your PC. While you’re on the PC, you can make additional configuration changes in text files to configure wifi network credentials, static IP address and others. WIFI credentials being most important if you don’t plan to connect it by ethernet or don’t have extra monitors, keyboards, and mouse.
Then you place the SD card to the Pi and boot it up. It automatically connects to the WIFI using the credentials you set in the SD card. If you used an static IP address, use it to ssh into it. Then copy the pihole installation code from the pihole website. And you’re done.
If you want to give pihole a try before you get a Raspberry pi, you can install it within other Linux OS, like Linux mint. You can move all the configurations by exporting them later.
which company and specs?
BSD overtake Linux or Windows in some areas
Any examples? besides the well known security, lower footprint and simplicity. genuinely curious.
when the intro said everyone was happy before introducing the platform, I knew it was going to be a community for steaming pile of shits.
After exploring a bit, it seems I was right.
I run a blog on hugo static website generator with TinaCMS (previously forestry.io). Forestry was more intuitive but TinaCMS can be self hosted and in active development so hopefully it’ll get there soon.
Asking it on their Github issues would be more useful.
Ultimated Privacy Achieved!! lol
Afaik Rustdesk server isn’t opensource and you’re limited to using their free servers in Europe for relay. I just need an alternative for lan remote desktop.
RDPWrap used to be able to run a patched version of RDP for Windows Home to enable incoming RDP but it isn’t maintained anymore. You didn’t need to upgrade to Pro.
you could set up email accounts as forwarders to a single account. And on the email client add these accounts as aliases so you can reply with them. So you get a single unified view of emails as well as ability to reply with the one you want.