I'm experiencing a similar issue on my phone and I'm using ublock, it is draining the battery very fast and making the phone hot.
I wonder if there is a good alternative/degoogled chrome for Android?
I'm experiencing a similar issue on my phone and I'm using ublock, it is draining the battery very fast and making the phone hot.
I wonder if there is a good alternative/degoogled chrome for Android?
Thank you about mentioning Wintile! I was wondering today if there is a way to do 2x2 tiling on gnome
For me Hetzner cloud is on the top, fair pricing (especially comparing to top cloud providers), very quick instance creation, pretty versatile - for example you can create an internal network between dedicated servers in hetzner and their cloud instances.
i miss old plex (~2016), when it was actually focused on providing local content, good thing jellyfin exist
Hey, could you provide more details about setup? Are you using ansible or docker? Using any other reverse proxy?
Well, probably, but considering that sh.itjust.works was targeted by bots, i suspect that it is slow not only because of the users
You can always switch to different, smaller instance (all posts and comments are available on all lemmy instances), but i'm not sure if there is any easy tool to transfer your subscribed communities
Close enough! I'm using a HP z230 SFF, not as small as those 1L USFF, but pretty practical for a small homeserver, have a couple of PCI-E slots to expand, can hold 2x HDD (if you count replacing 5,25 optical drive with a tray) or multiple SSD wherever they fit. Pretty happy with this build, day-to-day it draws about ~18-50W from the wall, depends on load.
No, i didn't, but i think it should also work over cloudflared
Proxmox itself is pretty lightweight, and yes, i'm also running other VMs and LXC containers (not much, about 9 containers with some lite services like teamspeak server, couple of bots, deluge and hestiacp, prometheus, k3s for testing and "vdi" in vm). Actually - i'm running docker - inside LXC containers. Not the prettiest way to do it, but it works fine
I'm using hestiacp to host some websites anyway, so i just added a new nginx template to create reverse proxy to lemmy+lemmy_ui containers
It doesn't matter that website loads javascript code for logged in user, as you need a token (which server will give you after a successful login) to authenticate to apis, it is pretty common to do that way
There wasn't a client side API, but the API was missing crucial validation of user input (eg only checking the mac address but didn't check who is actually authenticated)