kiol

joined 1 year ago
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668308

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668307

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668305

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668264

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668172

Please enjoy this very technical discussion on Nextcloud Atomic, the immutable system-level wrapper for Nextcloud AIO, which is being designed as the successor to NextcloudPi. Atomic delivers Nextcloud as a simple deployment for single machines, allowing easy selfhosting for home enthusiasts and anyone else wanting to run Nextcloud.

Interview includes Tobias (Atomic, NextcloudPi, Nextcloud Secrets) and Marcel (Floccus, Bookmarks, Recognize). Begins with quick overview and review of running Nextcloud, along with popular outlying Nextcloud implementations and apps then discussed at-length. For comprehensive show notes and timestamps click here.

If you enjoy the interview, please do share it with others! Thanks so much.

[–] kiol@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Hmm, there are multiple links

Main site at https://seagl.org/ and they are on fediverse @SeaGL@mastodon.social

A number of talks and expo hall. All are welcome; please help re-share so people can know about it and attend. Lots of the talks will be on streaming as well for remote participation. They also have Matrix chats https://seagl.org/meet
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/38329467

Main site at https://seagl.org/ and they are on fediverse @SeaGL@mastodon.social

A number of talks and expo hall. All are welcome; please help re-share so people can know about it and attend. Lots of the talks will be on streaming as well for remote participation. They also have Matrix chats https://seagl.org/meet

 

Main site at https://seagl.org/ and they are on fediverse @SeaGL@mastodon.social

A number of talks and expo hall. All are welcome; please help re-share so people can know about it and attend. Lots of the talks will be on streaming as well for remote participation. They also have Matrix chats https://seagl.org/meet

[–] kiol@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago

FreshRSS to keep track of as much as possible, along with Uptime Kuma and plain old bookmarks

 

I know dashboards are super trendy, but I'd love to hear from those who are not using them. I personally use FreshRSS to keep track of as much as possible, along with Uptime Kuma and plain old bookmarks. Perhaps there is a better overview solution, but I also love filtering what I see to not feel overwhelmed. or spammed, by information.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668307

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668305

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668264

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668172

Please enjoy this very technical discussion on Nextcloud Atomic, the immutable system-level wrapper for Nextcloud AIO, which is being designed as the successor to NextcloudPi. Atomic delivers Nextcloud as a simple deployment for single machines, allowing easy selfhosting for home enthusiasts and anyone else wanting to run Nextcloud.

Interview includes Tobias (Atomic, NextcloudPi, Nextcloud Secrets) and Marcel (Floccus, Bookmarks, Recognize). Begins with quick overview and review of running Nextcloud, along with popular outlying Nextcloud implementations and apps then discussed at-length. For comprehensive show notes and timestamps click here.

If you enjoy the interview, please do share it with others! Thanks so much.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668305

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668264

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668172

Please enjoy this very technical discussion on Nextcloud Atomic, the immutable system-level wrapper for Nextcloud AIO, which is being designed as the successor to NextcloudPi. Atomic delivers Nextcloud as a simple deployment for single machines, allowing easy selfhosting for home enthusiasts and anyone else wanting to run Nextcloud.

Interview includes Tobias (Atomic, NextcloudPi, Nextcloud Secrets) and Marcel (Floccus, Bookmarks, Recognize). Begins with quick overview and review of running Nextcloud, along with popular outlying Nextcloud implementations and apps then discussed at-length. For comprehensive show notes and timestamps click here.

If you enjoy the interview, please do share it with others! Thanks so much.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668264

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36668172

Please enjoy this very technical discussion on Nextcloud Atomic, the immutable system-level wrapper for Nextcloud AIO, which is being designed as the successor to NextcloudPi. Atomic delivers Nextcloud as a simple deployment for single machines, allowing easy selfhosting for home enthusiasts and anyone else wanting to run Nextcloud.

Interview includes Tobias (Atomic, NextcloudPi, Nextcloud Secrets) and Marcel (Floccus, Bookmarks, Recognize). Begins with quick overview and review of running Nextcloud, along with popular outlying Nextcloud implementations and apps then discussed at-length. For comprehensive show notes and timestamps click here.

If you enjoy the interview, please do share it with others! Thanks so much.

[–] kiol@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago (5 children)

What OS are you using?

[–] kiol@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I see. There is no disrespect intended, because it is a discussion thread starter. My question about this is: what would be the better phrasing for the subject matter of this post? Either way, discussion seems to be going great. Cheers all, because it isn't a discussion of what is better: it is a general curiosity for people running bare metal, because it seems to receive zero discussion. I am glad to see such people responding, positive or negative.

[–] kiol@lemmy.world 18 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Question is totally on purpose, so that you'll fill in what it means to you. The intention is to get responses from people who are not using containers, that is all. Thank you for responding!

[–] kiol@lemmy.world -1 points 2 months ago (3 children)

What do you mean?

[–] kiol@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago

Say more, what did that experience teach you? And, what would you do instead?

[–] kiol@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Can anyone confirm if containers would actually impact CPU to GPU transfers

[–] kiol@lemmy.world 6 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Did you try compose scripts as opposed to docker run

[–] kiol@lemmy.world 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)
[–] kiol@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I see. Are you the only user?

[–] kiol@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Do you back it up?

 

Curious to know what the experiences are for those who are sticking to bare metal. Would like to better understand what keeps such admins from migrating to containers, Docker, Podman, Virtual Machines, etc. What keeps you on bare metal in 2025?

 

Project at https://github.com/jaemzware/stuffedanimalwar

Try a live example at https://stuffedanimalwar.com:55556/fromkittehwithlove

Sort of a modern twist on BBS. Every new user will not see what was done previously, but stick around and enjoy the chaos.

75
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by kiol@lemmy.world to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 

Been running my own podcast on Castopod for the last year and it has been quite the learning experience. First, realized that part of running the show was making it available through mainstream platforms, but started with basic RSS feed and fediverse integration (for Mastodon users and such).

op3 analytics easily allows anyone to have basic understanding of their audience. Added basic podcasting 2.0 support, which also allowed IPFS support, but still haven't dug too deep into this (beyond knowing it is working). Added transcriptions with local-only Whisper and chapter support with ChapterTool, because people expect this in podcasting 2.0 clients.

Setup a chat on matrix.org and got a friend to help with a Draupnir moderation bot (which we were also testing for a community Open Source project chat). Decided to migrate my domain to a new registrar supporting Let's Encrypt certificates natively (I was maintaining them via a cron command unofficially, otherwise not supported by the domain registrar). Transition was smooth and no problem.

Created a dedicated podcast email account for people to contact the show and migrated my email smtp/imap to a dedicated service I could trust (and use as a relay once I eventually begin selfhosting the email server as well). Added a Flarum forum, since somewhere is needed for longer form conversations. Plugged in Uptime Kuma for monitoring and added all of my services to FreshRSS in order to keep tabs on all of my work. These days I'm wishing I'd simply used a wiki, or even a collaborative chat platform like HedgeDoc. Found LimeSurvey a bit too much for my needs, but Nextcloud Forms has worked just fine for people to send in their anonymous feedback.

Things are fairly quiet in terms of the show, but working out just fine. No doubt I'm forgetting tons of steps in regards to all of what I've learned, but it has been a fruitful year. Been using flat VPN network approach to connect to any servers and homelab applications being tested. Looking forward to more progress this next year. You can checkout the show here if you are curious.

 

Happy Birthday to Linux from 8/25. Detailed show notes available here.

Selfhosted apps

  • Jellyswarrm
  • iSponsorBlockTV

Desktop apps

  • Anki

  • Thunderbird

  • Steam key giveaway

  • Share your thoughts on Matrix Chat and Truenas

 

Seems this just released 10 hours. Was mentioned in this other thread, but figured it was worth granting it's own topic. Very Cool! I'm not the dev, but this is awesome. Was originally posted to Reddit here.

Oh wow, repo is https://github.com/LLukas22/Jellyswarrm

Jellyswarrm is a reverse proxy that lets you combine multiple Jellyfin servers into one place. If you’ve got libraries spread across different locations or just want everything together, Jellyswarrm makes it easy to access all your media from a single interface.

Working

  • Unified Library Access – Browse media from multiple Jellyfin servers in one place.
  • Direct Playback – Play content straight from the original server without extra overhead.
  • User Mapping – Link accounts across servers for a consistent user experience.
  • API Compatibility – Appears as a normal Jellyfin server, so existing apps and tools still work.

⚠️ In Progress

  • Websocket Support – Needed for real-time features like SyncPlay (not fully reliable yet).
  • Audio Streaming – May not function correctly (still untested in many cases).
  • Automatic Bitrate Adjustment – Stream quality based on network conditions isn’t supported yet.

🚫 Not Planned

  • Admin Functions – Server administration (user management, settings, etc.) won’t be supported through Jellyswarrm.----
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