Finished my migration from Plex to Jellyfin
#50501
Finished my migration from Plex to Jellyfin
Installkernel doesn’t care about your init system, only about the bootloader. It happily works with grub so you don’t need to worry about it
How to kill a service speedrun any%
Fedora is semi-rolling, it’s got fairly up-to date packages
Yeah, any relatively modern used PC will be more than enough
My personal recommendations: Fedora KDE, Nobara or Linux Mint. You can’t go wrong with either one of them.
Well, firstly I had this weird issue where the pools were giving me errors because some folder was missing, I fixed that but 24.10 has literally 0 compatibility with apps from 24.04 and it looks like I’m going to have to reset the whole pool in order to use their new apps ecosystem (because trying to install anything from 24.10 just errors out)… Which is extremely annoying as I have quite a lot of apps setup
I’m going through hell, trying to update from truenas scale 24.04 to 24.10
Mullvad all the way
nearly everything, you don’t need a static ip to selfhost, look up DDNS :>
I’m trying to figure out why truenas scale refuses to auto start virtual machines… Other than that everything’s smooth atm :>
*except JavaScript
Nextcloud notes, it gets the job done 👍
Just log the user agent and if it comes up as safari, redirect people to the Firefox download page :)
You don’t need to be a programmer to selfhost.
The most important “skills” to have if you want to selfhost imo are:
Basic Networking knowledge
Basic Linux knowledge
Basic docker/docker compose knowledge
But I’d say to not get lost in the papers and just jump right in. Imo, the best way to learn how to selfhost is to just… Do it. Most everything is free and fairly well documented
Aw yep, bought an old HP pro-lient something something with 2 old-ass intel xeons and 64GB ram for practically nothing. Thing’s been great. It’s a bit loud but runs anything I throw at it.
I really don’t care about the configuration, as long as all the data is safe
Nope
Here are some of my default picks: Nobara, Fedora KDE, Linux Mint. Can’t go wrong with either