I have Jellyfin, but I haven’t tried it with music. How does it compare to Navidrome?
For chat, I was thinking something super simple for the weird situations like this. Alternatively, Briar if you’re near the person you want to contact
I waddled onto the beach and stole found a computer to use.
🍁⚕️ 💽
Note: I’m moderating a handful of communities in more of a caretaker role. If you want to take one on, send me a message and I’ll share more info :)
I have Jellyfin, but I haven’t tried it with music. How does it compare to Navidrome?
For chat, I was thinking something super simple for the weird situations like this. Alternatively, Briar if you’re near the person you want to contact
It makes me wish I was selfhosting more services, music & chat in particular. It wasn’t important enough to set up yet
Is there no way to check the doorbell video locally?
An Amazon employee misconfigures something and now your doorbell doesn’t work
Is tailscale running / logged in on those other devices? Does it auto detect the server like it did on the phone?
Is there a downside to using the term “provider” when talking about choosing an instance? Ultimately, that is where the difference would be. The entity in charge of the instance needs to be trustworthy and have a moderation style/philosophy that the user agrees with.
I like “home”, I might try using that in the future :)
An immediate problem is that “community” is a term in the threadiverse, where !fediverse@lemmy.ml is a community. It also might make it sound like an exclusive thing with a specific topic, whereas in reality when you join a server you can still interact with the wider network.
IMO this is a concept that can’t be expressed in one word when someone is unfamiliar with the concept. We put together this guide a while back to try and explain it: https://fedecan.ca/en/guide/get-started
There’s also this on Windows
https://github.com/files-community/Files
Although it seemed to freeze up from time to time back when I was on windows
I posted this to /c/news where it was promptly removed of course
The removal might be duplicate post or original title related? I see this another post in the community with the same article here:
https://lemmy.ml/post/36868753
If you check the web UI, the cross post section should have links to those other posts.
As for the title rule, I’m not a mod there but we have a similar rule in !canada@lemmy.ca. What I’ve recommended to people is to keep the original title and then add extra context in the post body. The exception being when people add updates or fix clickbait with some indication that the title was modified. Or alternatively, make a text post where it’s clear that you wrote the title, and add the link(s) as supporting evidence in the post body.
Even if your custom title is correct, the rule is needed since it gets difficult for mods to weigh in on every post and decide on what’s correct and what’s misleading/disinformation
Unless they mean something like the Respondus rootkit
https://discuss.privacyguides.net/t/best-way-to-use-respondus-lockdown-browser-for-school/26098
IMO some exams should just be proctored in person
Is this because it’s getting difficult for students to mess with the boot options?
Have you tried the third party ones? I’ve seen recommendations for Swiftfin
I’m not sure which guides to recommend, but in case it helps narrow down your search, you could share more about your situation:
Do you have any existing hardware or are you planning to buy? If so, what is the budget for the equipment and where in the world are you approximately?
What did you want to self host? Some services would benefit from a certain type of setup. For example, if you’re serving lots of media, if you need redundancy and uptime, if you’re running AI models or something that needs a GPU
General tips:
For Linux, a lot of people go with Ubuntu server because there are a lot of existing guides for it. You don’t need much Linux knowledge to start self hosting since you can learn by doing over time. Some concepts to explore before getting started might be cron, the Linux file system, and user permissions.
For Docker, you should be fine if you know the basics. I’d recommend using Docker Compose since it’s easier to understand what’s happening when its written out in a nice yaml file. Install Docker and Docker Compose on the server, and then install something like DockGE to manage the compose files. When you want to run a service, copy the Docker compose file and then swap the port to what port you want to use, and the volume to the location you tend to use.
For a very basic setup, I’d find a video guide for
We’ve had to block a number of IPs for our instance. One was a misconfigured fediverse project that was hammering our instance, and a number of them seem to be AI companies scraping for content.
Maybe something similar is happening on your instance?
Thank you!
Just do like 10 minutes of research before you buy
The average person might not know what’s reputable and what’s not. A lot of the VPN review sites are also secretly run by the VPN companies, or get paid off by them. Someone might even mix up the bad PrivacyTools
for the legitimate PrivacyGuides
I haven’t heard of any learning curve with Jellyfin. It seems easy to set up, and the apps are about as user friendly as you can get (especially the third party ones)
On a related note, this story from 2024:
Even ignoring any ownership issues, it’s an awful service. If you look up “ExpressVPN cancel” you’ll find lots of posts and comments from people complaining that they were charged again after cancelling, that the interface makes it difficult to cancel, that they needed to reach out to support multiple times, etc.
Instead:
I check this guide from time to time to see if anything has changed with the usual recommendations:
Oh nice!
I also didn’t know it could do unit conversions lol