Not op, but using colmena for that
RecitalMatchbox
I use a keyball61 as i wanted a split keyboard (hands at shoulder distance) with integrated trackball (always keep hands at same position) Using it with box jades currently, as i want very strong and clicky keys. Was used to a dell at101w with black alps before, and wanted something similar. Will probably switch to a silent alternative in the future, when I stop working remote-only
As this is linux4noobs, you don't want Devuan. Use a systemd-based like 95% of people. Debian is just very stable but sometimes lags on application versions because of that. Ubuntu has newer versions and is supported by a company, which is why lots of people use it. Everyone hates it because that company also made some questionable decisions for Ubuntu. But in the end it is decently well supported
Aiming to go daemonless and then rootless for as many containers as possible to minimize attack surface
Chose yesterday late evening as the time to migrate my containers from docker to podman (still rootful). By luck most things work again, except wireguard/qbittorrent
How does diy hrt even work?
Yeah, you just need to set your DNS using Cloudflare. Your router doesn't matter. Ddclient will get your external IP address, usually by querying an external server like ifconfig.me (this is all configurable), and then use the configured provider (e.g. cloudflare) to point the DNS records to your external IP. You need to configure your DNS registrar to use the Cloudflare nameservers for your domain. Then just regularly (daily) run ddclient, e.g. using a cronjob
I'm having a good experience with cloudflare, using ddclient on a cron job
To clarify: it doesn't matter much what your router supports if you have a server with ddclient (possibly in Docker container). Then you can choose whatever provider you'd like, and there are tons of resources on ddclient.
Make sure you don't have thrips on the bottom side of the leaves. They can cause browning.
I use:
- 3-way zfs mirror for important data like photos, documents
- snapraid for bulky and less important data like movies
- hourly backup of important data and a subset of the less important data (difficult to find movies) to a rpi with a big disk
- daily backup of the same data to a friend. We have a system where we put a hdd in each other's server and have ssh access
Backups are done using restic
Off-site rather than offline, protecting against things like your house burning down.
Which pressure advance calibration do you use and why?