Having just jumped over I might be bottom of the priority list for company communications.
Having just jumped over I might be bottom of the priority list for company communications.
Guess I’m a low-value client.
I might do so as well to avoid the next decade of shopping around.
I know there are other factors it just feels like the only people getting screwed are the little guys. In Canada the rates that third party ISPs pay and charge are dictated by the giant telcos. Our regulating body even allowed the telcos to raise prices to the point where reselling is no longer viable. Fucking the little guys again.
Docker kinda does it by being like an app store but for servers. It’s not very flexible but everyone using a particular image gets the same experience.
Ubuntu has a bigger market share in the support department. Makes it easier to find advice that applies specifically to your setup.
This is the way. I run stock Debian with LXC, you get what you ask for and that’s it.
I was with Google Domains but switched to Namecheap. They are easy enough to work with and not the most expensive.
They suck to edit but you can create them in most Free/Open/Libre software. It’s my favorite way to distribute drawings so that they print the same on every machine.
The are a requirement for distributing a document that has to look the same on every device. I don’t love them and Adobe can go take a flying fuck but if I NEED to make sure that my boss doesn’t alter a document it has to be a PDF.
Who needs fuses anyway.
KeePassXC/KeeWeb + WebDAV is a kick-ass combo that covers every device while also being as simple as possible.
Lazy users is why Reddit blotted out individual forums.
Super impressed with Sharry, I love the QR codes for sharing with mobile users.
I set my 403 to just return “I don’t know you.”
Hey, this isn’t where I parked my car.
Looks like you solved it but I moved from Google DNS to Namecheap and it works well. I use multiple subdomains and certbot without issue.
If you use strong passwords and keep an eye on your logs you are no less safe than any other public facing entity. I’ve had a bunch of services exposed since 2020 so far no one has even bothered to brute the basic auth on Apache (though bot nets take a run at SSH a few times a year).
I map them every day.
https://www.slax.org/ It’s easy, is a full featured desktop, and has persistence on your USB stick.