

Like most of the best things in life, Proxmox is built from Debian.


Like most of the best things in life, Proxmox is built from Debian.


I walked into to work this morning from a dev IM needing permissions. Instead of telling me what the error message said, which would contain the allowance needed, he needed he sent me a screenshot of what chatGPT said he needed. GPT effectively said the solution was to let him assume any privileged access policy that exists.
I think security teams are fine for a while.


Yeah. Obviously that’s what console.debug() is for.


My 20 year dislike of RoR is finally justified, regardless of me not seeing this coming.


I’ve been using Pinchflat for a while. Its working but a bit rough.


Interesting. I’ve gotten OK working in Krtia, but I feel like I’m working around its UI since I’m not using it as the drawing tool it’s meant to be.


Well, its apparently borked and I didn’t realize it. I’ve never gotten an IP ban but I also wasn’t using it a ton - mostly just for when I’d search for instructions on something an a YT vid was my only option.
I mainly use Nebula for watching videos. And the handful of creators I follow who are strictly youtube, get slurped up by ytdlp via Pinchflat


No, it doesn’t seem to be. That’s ashame.


I host a number of alternate frontends. Alexandrite for Lemmy, Redlib for Reddit, Invidious for Youtube. And then I have the Privacy Redirect extension make any links to Reddit or Youtube go to my local.


I was excited for IPv6 in the 90s.


In my day vibe coding meant a delivery pizza, loud music, an eighth, and no other plans for the day.


yes


First set up your certificate in the SSL tab of NPM. You can either upload a traditional certificate or set up LetsEncrypt. Be aware that starting next spring the maximum length of a certificate will drop to 9 months and continue to decrease over the next few years until its 47 days.
I have mine set up so LetsEncrypt gets a wildcard cert for my domain (via DNS challenge). Some people go with per subdomain certs.
Once you have the cert, go you each of your hosts and switch to its SSL tab. Then select your cert. Then I usually turn on “Force SSL”


I use Nginx Proxy Manager running as a docker container. Its a gui that makes administration more straight forward. It points at all my services (docker and otherwise) and handles the SSL for me. Because I don’t want to have any ports open I use DNS challenge ACME and NPM has built in support for a number APIs from large public DNS providers to automate that.


For those unfamiliar, Dawarich is a self hosted location tracker / timeline
Thank you for that. Its surprising how long that takes to answer when I see some release announcements. Especially over on Mastodon.


I use Proxmox because its handy to be able to use both LXC containers and full VMs. I installed it as an ISO so its built on top of Debian. There are helper scripts specific to installing Home Assistant on a VM (as well as a number of other things). And the proxmox UI comes in handy.
I have Home Assistant in a VM so I can run it on top of HAOS. Then the rest of the box is set up as an unprivileged LXC where I installed docker. I run all my *ARR apps straight on my Synology (via docker) so they have fast access to my Library volume, and everything else running on the setup I just described. Then I use Portainer to maintain my containers so I can manage both the syno and proxmox docker installs from one page.


Not true at all. If you want to run Home Assistant on top of Home Assistant OS then it needs to be on bare metal or a full VM because its an OS. Running on HAOS is easy mode, but not required.
“Bash must have solved the fork bomb by now…”
I can’t respect that list anyway. Where is Hanna Montana Linux?!