I’ve used about 10 years ago too, but I’ve heard that now it needs a Mikrotik device but I’ve nver had the time to test it
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Can it discover non Mikrotik devices?
peregus@lemmy.worldOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How to send backups on multiple location?English1·1 month agoHow would you create the remote repository? With rest-server?
peregus@lemmy.worldOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How to send backups on multiple location?English2·1 month agoGot it, good idea, thanks!
peregus@lemmy.worldOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How to send backups on multiple location?English1·1 month agoI’m sorry, but I still don’t understand what you mean. Could you please elaborate bit? Thanks!
peregus@lemmy.worldOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How to send backups on multiple location?English4·1 month agoWhy Tailscale AND Headscale? Arent’t they the same thing?
peregus@lemmy.worldOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How to send backups on multiple location?English5·1 month agoDefinitely a good suggestion!
peregus@lemmy.worldto Privacy Guides@lemmy.one•Privacy is Also Protecting the Data of OthersEnglish1·3 months agoFossyfy also has an open source SMS app, you can view all of them here.
peregus@lemmy.worldto Privacy Guides@lemmy.one•The Unique ID You're Giving to EveryoneEnglish41·3 months agoThank God I’m European and the privacy laws here are pretty strict, so at least the official channels can’t collect and provide our personal data. I’ve a second SIM card installed in an old smartphone that forward (done with the Tasker app) to my Telegram account all the SMS that it receives and the phone numbers that try to call it and I use that number when is mandatory on a website/service.
peregus@lemmy.worldto Privacy Guides@lemmy.one•Privacy is Also Protecting the Data of OthersEnglish6·3 months agoIt seems pretty extreme to me. Any app needs your consent to access your contacts and if you wanna hide them from Google to (if you’ve an Android smartphone), you could just download an open source contact app (like Fossify Contacts)
peregus@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•This Week in Self-Hosted (7 March 2025)English2·3 months agoOn another note, I received some flack last week for poking fun at the Immich devs for prioritizing the platform’s new mascot over a feature I’ve personally been looking forward to (yes, they were in on it). I had planned to make a formal apology this week until I noticed they dropped another release that again left me feeling neglected as they instead celebrated 60k GitHub stars (is that a lot?).
If you need me before next Friday, I’ll be busy making the transition back to Google Photos while enjoying this custom CSS for styling a Flame dashboard to look like the Lumon MDR terminals from Severance
Both these sentence feels very childish to me. First of all, it’s an open source software, nobody can pretend anything!
Second, it’s clear that, as mentioned by one of the developer, they were joking about itIf he was joking too, I didn’t get it.
I use Alps bigger peaks for the hosts like:
- Castore
- Polluce
- Lyskamm
- Gnifetti
- etc.
(yes, mainly from Monte Rosa) and smaller peaks for the VMs:
- Grigna
- Grignetta
- Resegone
- Cornizzolo
- Palanzone
- etc.
peregus@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How can I host a small api/database accessable from a phone app as cheap/easily as possible?English2·3 months agoI’ve read very bad experiences about Oracle free tier VPS, like VPS disappeared for good with all the data.
peregus@lemmy.worldto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Boycotting FOSS projects in the wake of the "buy canadian/european" movement makes no sense10·3 months agoWell, if it’s buy European how can open source fit in?
Right, I should probably map the file directly to the system log folder. I’ll try that.
Be too, and I went back to the standalone community container
The
price rboemproblem is that the log file is inside the container in the www folder.Edit: typo
The fact (IMHO) is that the logs shouldn’t be there, in a persistent volume.
The SSD nowadays have a very high write limit, unless you’ll keep writing data on them constantly, you’ll never worn out. You will have to write about 500 times the whole SSD to wear it out (some thousands for enterprise SSDs).