

It isn’t. It depends on the task and load though. The better the hardware, the faster it is.


It isn’t. It depends on the task and load though. The better the hardware, the faster it is.


My guess: Transcode process


That sounds like you use the mesh vpn for managing the server, e.g. ssh, and you’ve got a server at home and route all traffic via the vps to hide your ip. Do i get it right?
OP’s setting sounded like he’s exposing his stuff publicly after routing through mesh vpn


You use a mesh vpn with a reverse proxy? How does that work?
I run opencloud containers straight on my NAS server running ubuntu LTS, I then expose container ports on tailscale only, and then I route it via nginx proxy manager through my public VPS via tailscale.
I’m not sure. Is it public facing or not? What’s the mesh vpn for?
and so should you.
Why should I? I couldn’t read it in the post. I use nextcloud because its easy and it has caldav which I use nextcloud 50% for. The other 50 percent is thinking I have a cloud if I someday need one.
I used to use npm. If you know it and you’re happy, use it.
It took me 3 times until I understood and got caddy installed. First, I tried using it via podman and failed. In the end I just installef it via dnf and it worked without any problems. Learning a caddy file is easy. I’ll never look back. It’s so nice and easy. Easier than npm but no gui but that’s not needed


I’ve got 1TB pictures and videos. I can either pay google a shitload of money and fear that they delte my stuff. Or I can self host immich for a fraction of the cost for electricity and a donation.


Why overly complex? What do you mean?
Gitea is alright. It’s a very well working git server.
Someone probably wanted the 3d preview and maybe it wasn’t difficult. You could say integrating “gitea pages” would be a high priority but that doesn’t mean that there can be side quests along the way. You can probably read the PR if you want to know why it’s included


On my ubuntu I use unattended updates but that doesn’t work reliably. I have to update it manually most of the time. Once every other month.
On my fedora server it auto updates every day at 4 reliably.
The next server is going to be atomic such that the server restart is even shorter (not that I would care about it at 4).


Fwiw: I use a reverse proxy (caddy). Maybe you are interested in that


Fwiw: there us a Gnome extension to add profiles to the top bar


flatpak > distrobox > nix > appimage > brew > .deb
I never installed any gui via podman. Not sure when it applies
If an app has bugs via flatpak, then don’t use the flatpak. Maybe it’ll be resolved in a year and then switch.
Edit: removed snap from list
Thanks!
I was searching for that log page in the settings / dashboard😅
How do I know that the migration is over?
Installing arch is not difficult. Difficult is to keep track on innovation in the linux space. You are responsible to install and maintain everything. You have to decide if you want something like selinux, at what time it is mature enough to use it, install and use it. You have to evaluate if selinux is better than it’s “competitors”. You have to decide which firewall you use today and as soon as a new system pops up, you have to read up on it. You decide at what time flatpak is mature enough to use it. All this and much more is done and decided by distro maintainers. They keep up with new stuff and guide you. By using arch, you decide that you want to take care of it and that is ok, but no “normal” pc user who uses her PC once a week shall be expected to read upon all the computer maintenance stuff that is just of secondary importance to her.


I think it’s astonishing that people still recommend linux based on the DE. As if there was no other difference. The big distros all support the big DEs.


Also if you want another resolution. Then it’ll also transcode afaik.
I like paperwm or niri