How do you manage your services on that, docker compose files? I'm really trying to get away from the workflow of clicking around in some UI to configure everything, only for it to glitch out and disappear and I have to try and remember what things to click to get it back. It was my main problem with portainer that caused me to move away from it (I have separate issues with docker-compose but that's another thing)
I didn’t mean to criticize the effort, sorry if it came across that way. I meant to criticize the article for leaving that out of the headline.
While I believe and wish it would happen sooner, my intention wasn’t to bash on the great work they’re doing.
Lay the ground for a national strike…… In 2028. Kind of an important detail to leave out of the headline.
I’m all for a national strike, but we really can’t wait that long.
It's been about 3 weeks. Yeah that makes sense, I do feel like I've noticed that while my speed test results are not changing as fast, my ability to actually do stuff has been getting better.
Thanks! Interesting, if I can get better-categorized releases that would for sure be a plus. And I'm always happy to have faster downloads!
Interesting, faster downloads would for sure be a plus as you're right that sometimes you get stuck with something crazy slow using torrents
Huh yeah that's not a bad idea. I actually sort of dislike the nextcloud client normally (as I'd prefer it to not actually download the remote files, but act like a virtual filesystem). But in this case, it might actually work...
Thanks! I already use NextCloud and quite like it! Hover, I find their file upload feature to be lacking for this use-case. Sadly, it crashes/freezes the browser when I try to upload a folder with a lot of files (which is the main thing I'll need to do with this)
Haha I'm totally fine with that, honestly for me it's a part of the hobby I enjoy!
Are you located in the EU or in California? If so you are covered by super strong privacy laws that can help with this.
As opposed to a corperate social media site, Lemmy has waaaay lower operating costs (not servers). It’s open source so dev work is volunteer, and there isn’t a bunch of resources dedicated to squeezing users for every penny or appeasing advertisers.
Servers can get pricey for sure, but not having all of that other overhead goes a ways to making it more sustainable.
Okay I'm trying out seafile and it seems awesome, so maybe that will be the way to go.
It stores them in a custom format in blocks, which is the only real downside because that means it can't interop with things like FTP or SMB