If it is, it’s news to me. I co-owned an education data consultancy (before realizing there was no money in education) that used a .org; we were for-profit.
If it is, it’s news to me. I co-owned an education data consultancy (before realizing there was no money in education) that used a .org; we were for-profit.
AudiobookShelf does more than audiobooks. You can do epubs, etc.
Big fan of SFTPGo. We use it at work - it’s rock solid and feature rich.
Hmm, that really doesn’t sound like a traffic pattern that would be confused with a DDoS attack. I would be frustrated as hell too.
What’s concerning is that our traffic would look very similar. We have a VPN dedicated droplet that allows access to our DO private network where the rest of our resources can be accessed. We also have high throughput periods though not as sustained as yours.
That’s really unfortunate. I love Digital Ocean and spend about $800/month with them for work.
Can you tell me more about the traffic they are mistakenly flagging as a DDOS? I ask because I have regular DB and file backups happening and if we had traffic shutdown on production assets for 3-4 hours, it would be a big fucking deal.
Immich is better in my opinion. Especially as a Google Photos replacement since it does maps, facial tagging, object identification and search.
Edit - Wow, Photoprism has a lot of those features now too. It’s come a long way in the two-ish years since I looked at it.
Solid Explorer allows you to turn on an FTP server. It’s not something you’d want to expose to the Internet or use long-term but it’s good for quick local transfers.
It’s not the percentage total but the speed of increase.
Same, but with Poste.io instead of Mailcow. Zero complaints.
Agreed. Grab a T490S off eBay with an i5, 16GB RAM, and a 512GB SSD for $225 and you’re all set.
Not only did discussion used to drive that site, but thriving niche communities. I hired a young-ish (~25) webdev recently and he asked where I heard about a certain topic. I told him reddit and he was genuinely confused. I sent him links to r/webdev, r/selfhosted, r/sysadmin, r/datahoarder, and a handful of other recommendations. His mind was blown that reddit not only had those communities, but how deep the content was.
My point is, reddit has really leaned into the lowest common denominator audience to chase growth and has completely abandoned its nerd roots (most evidently by its API policy changes).
They aren’t fully auth-gating the comments yet. You can view the first 5-8 top-level comments and 2-3 comments deep on each parent. Overall, I find myself spending probably 1/5 of the time on a thread that I used to.
EDIT - This is on the mobile browser view.
Orange Pi 5 Plus
Not sure about EU sellers or WOP though.
http://www.orangepi.org/html/hardWare/computerAndMicrocontrollers/details/Orange-Pi-5-plus.html
Zimaboard and Zimablade are good too, but I’m not sure if they’re open source. The Zimaboard has PCIE.
youtube-dl
is pretty much the gold standard for all things YouTube downloading.
If your server has IPMI, there’s little difference between being there in person and not.
Thanks for the suggestion, but this doesn’t give me any info.
For the uninitiated, as someone who’s looking to move from Windows to Linux and Ubuntu is probably my first choice, can you share what’s not to like about this?
Edit - insightful answers. Thank you
Serious question, what about Ubuntu worries you in terms of privacy?
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I just downloaded it and tried it. Unfortunately, since I live in the vast suburban sprawl of a major US city, its ETA is way off because I doesn’t take traffic info account. Compared to Google Maps, its ETA was off by a significant margin (12 minutes OM vs 20 minutes Google Maps and 38 vs 54).
Glad to see this is an active project though.