![](https://lemmy.sdf.org/pictrs/image/597be2cf-e322-4ab3-8f1f-dc29d026010d.png)
![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/2QNz7bkA1V.png)
That’s why we need the shawomen and the shachildren too
That’s why we need the shawomen and the shachildren too
I started learning k8s about 5 years ago, and in about 8 months I was ready to setup k3s at home and manage everything with ArgoCD.
Approximately 3 years ago I set up a second cluster on digital ocean and moved some workloads to that, including ArgoCD which manages both the remote DO cluster and the home k3s cluster
Never heard of dockStarter so I’m gonna say yes
Compose is good for getting started, and might be sufficient for a long time. Eventually I moved to k8s but I also use that for work so it was an easy move for me.
I really liked the design of the underlying protocol (OSCAR, also used by AIM). It was a lot of fun to implement in a 3rd party client and I learned so much about networking and application protocols from the experience. It contributed immensely my career path.
Internet archive actively tried to gather as much as possible before it was decommissioned:
I used idonethis.com a long time ago, but haven’t had a need for it lately so can’t comment on any changes to it in the past 4-4l5 years
Some people were forced away from Reddit and don’t subscribe to that idea (yet?) - maybe they will understand that after being here for some time, but I know when my reddit app stopped working I just wanted something to fill the void
I use oauth2proxy+nginx ingress gateway where needed (apps that don’t support OIDC themselves), with dex their OIDC provider, and github is dex’s upstream IDP+OIDC.
I use it for my home services but that’s because I also use it at work and understand it well. It is absolutely not something that a beginner should touch, especially if “docker” is a new term to them.
Where’s that Chris Pratt meme? –
I don’t know what that is and at this point I’m afraid to ask
Android, eh? Is it meant for phones, or is there a other set of android devices this is for?
I heard about the keys and the other website that serves them, seems an extremely important detail. I imagine the game dumps/copies are available as disk images of some sort online?
Thanks a lot for the info, skankhunt42!
I’m very uninformed here, haven’t gamed in a few years. But I’ve got a question- is yuzu software that is run on a rooted Switch device, or similar like a steam deck? Or do you run it on a computer? Or perhaps, it’s all of the above.
Anyway, thanks in advance if someone could give me a high level overview
Forking it now is a good idea.
Specifically, to a different repo hosting provider, or a server you control
this must be something I’m too usenet to understand
kidding of course, well done and thank you for your service
A big part of it is the open source aspect, yes.
In addition, Plex is increasingly weighing down their offering with new “features” of questionable value. Some would probably use the term “enshittification” to describe the trend over the past year or two.
I bought a plex lifetime license a long time ago (2013), but for a newcomer I would recommend Jellyfin. You can also run them both simultaneously with no issue and decide for yourself.
A single drive of that size goes for less than $100 USD (sometimes much less!). It’d actually be more economical to get an 8TB device for less than 2x the price. I’d suspect most folks in this community have far more than 3TB available…
Thanks for the heads up.
I plan on using digital ocean’s Spaces (s3-alike) where possible and also it’s intended to be a personal instance, at least to start - just for me to federate with others and subscribe to my communities. Given that, do you think it’ll still use much disk (block device) storage?
Might be time to familiarize myself with DO’s disk pricing…
It may be the worst one, but it’s the one everyone at my company uses. Having multiples is worse than having a bad one.