So what you want is a self hosted Flickr alternative, with extra privacy?
Please let me know your findings, I’m very interested even though I’m not in a position to contribute.
So what you want is a self hosted Flickr alternative, with extra privacy?
Please let me know your findings, I’m very interested even though I’m not in a position to contribute.
As one does.
I had the same question a while ago and got myself a Keychron C3 Pro for $40.
Ah, that makes a lot more sense.
If you don’t want to go to a proper VM solution like Proxmox or TrueNAS, Mint is still on X so you can SSH into it and run graphical apps through it. Runs remarkably well.
That’s not how docker works, bud.
I know, which is why it would be extra helpful.
Yeah, I fumbled that one.
I mean I’m suggesting it. There isn’t one.
Number of Drive bays is also a neat filter.
If you don’t mind me asking, why do you have such a door in your home?
Just an admission of incompetence on my part. I got the NAS up and running, but for the life of me, couldn’t set up a single docker service. No Jellyfin, Immich, pihole, nada.
Btw I’m serious about hiring. If this interests you, we can work details.
I could see this being a use case for a NixOS deployment where your company manages the configuration file and versioning of the system, as well as providing support. Over time, I’d you’re diligent about building documentation based off of each support request, you’ll end up with a personalized guide. And if your customer decides take a break or quit entirely, they have a configured system that doesn’t lock them in into something too esoteric.
Disclaimer: I only know of Nix, never used it because I just don’t manage that many machines to be worth my while to learn it.
I’d buy your services to configure my TrueNAS server right now.
That seems excessive.
Missed LDAP, bot.
Meanwhile the Linux Standards Base cries in a corner.
Suggestion: add other exercises. I can’t walk much because the impact is bad for my mangled knee, but biking is fine.
I don’t value my content all that much.
The only indentation method that the viewer has control on how big they want it.