hey, thats not fair, they redid it a few years back /s
hey, thats not fair, they redid it a few years back /s
just found out about this! why isn’t this more widely known/used (assumption)? just because of the lack of fine grained control?
brief question, as I couldn’t find it in the docs after a quick scroll through: if I create a user in the yunohost interface, is that user then able to login to the yunohost admin interface or will they get a user in every service that is and will be hosted, or would one have to manually create that user in every hosted app?
might be toxic, but the os is brilliant
just making sure: i am talking sbout the xapps and the releases they bring, not debian security or other updates of debian packages. i am familiar with the concept of up/-downstream, just wanted to know about cinnamon specific releases, which answers my question, i guess…
edit: typos
new to LMDE. does it usually get updates?
so gnu/linux is just a quick lernel rewrite away from total market domination. excellent!
not sure, if cinnamon still qualifies as alternative considering the massive Linux Mint crowd.
so many questions. what patents? how should they know you use it?
keepassxc database synced with syncthing across devices
never understood why steamos made sense aside from a steamdeck… just start steam in autostart and enable big picture
Unfortunately died last year
so… it can not be FreeBSD? :)
Wait aren’t the system requirements for Mailcow crazy high? How can you run it + other software on a mere Pi? Also: do you have a static IP?
Do you mean local communities? If not, I do not understand your statement.
Also: can you explain how searching for communities is worse on smaller instances than on large ones? That does not make sense to me and does not reflect my experience at all.
I‘m all with you on the beehaw topic, but please keep in mind to recommend smaller instances to newbies, because that‘s what federation is all about. Aside from load distribution (lots of instances are run by individuals or groups on small(ish) machines), you can avoid being independent on single large entities keeping their uptime etc.
TLDR: recommend smaller instances for load distribution to get the best out of a federated world!
- Nextcloud, mainly for calendars and contacts; occasionally for sharing files with others.
- Syncthing for syncing files.
Quick question: have you thought about hosting Radicale and filebrowser instead of NextCloud? I think that would be definetly lighter on your system.
Also: I have read lots of mixed opinions whether mailservers should be selfhosted - what is your take on this? Do you know about problems reaching the big player mailservers?
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