Not only backups, but also migration
That’s a great solution. (sarcasm)
It does leave your device, it’s connecting to either self hosted server or paid service cloud
Some kind of marketing is better than having some or no documentation what it even does.
To be fair though, calling an open-source project “product” is really weird and gives away how they see it.
As long as it’s free and the code is all there, the worst thing would be that the users have to migrate to a fork.
It is a paid service.
I’ll give it a spin
Nevermind, this isn’t self hosted. There is no way i upload all my pictures to anyone else, encrypted or not.
If anyone cares about a self-hosted solution: https://github.com/LibrePhotos/librephotos
Not if it’s opt-in hidden in the settings.
This is at least the only way i share analytics.
Double-NAT anyone? 3 times the fun, 2 times the work
I had some files which rot away over the years, who knows which update borked them, i use it as a cache for real backups for important files
Cool project!
Would love AMD Linux support though, Stable Diffusion is fairly easy to install, but i just don’t like the Stable Diffusion WebUI
A Flatpak would be golden
There is more to it with garage doors, what about the current state of the door, do you only want to open it a little bit for more fresh air and close it afterwards, bonus, is a car in there
One relay doesn’t fix this, it is simple but not that simple
Nextcloud does perform horrible, but i threw any extension at it i thought was useful.
ownClouds new microservice solution might solve that, but i can’t confirm it yet, of course it’s fast as a rocket now, it lacks features left and right
I successfully spun up an instance now, took me some fiddling, but that’s me not knowing docker-compose too good,
You don’t need a database, it’s not using SQL, and they separate everything in different layers and microservices.
Compared to PHP ownCloud and Nextcloud this does feel like the next gen.
For better or for worse, i have yet to find out.
To be more exact, ownCloud started as a community first project and they did pivot to a more enterprise facing project, starting to pack features behind a paywall and so on.
ownCloud Infinite Scale is almost a complete rewrite in Go instead of PHP, which is something very welcoming, because my instance starts to have subpar performance, i will test and find out if it’s worth the hype.
Because there is enough room for both and competition is good, in case Nextcloud goes south
They are both hacky, but the Docker image is only handling the tasks you want it too, not the whole system, so if it goes haywire it’s not as bad.
I would also not recommend running essentially a cracked server OS handling maybe your most important files.
If you insist to use some Synology application there is this solution:
Nginx Proxy Manager does also manage certificates, it makes it even easier to create separate certificates for different subdomains, which is nice for my sanity.
I don’t like that anybody checking out one certificate of any service and get all the subdomains I’m running too, and wildcard certificates are bad practice.
I was running the LS.io Letsencrypt container as it was named before, and SWAG for years, without any problems, it does its job, but then i’ve tried NPM and it made my life easier, i love the ability to change access rules or proxy settings with some simple clicks too, without having to edit countless config files for simple changes everywhere, that’s what ultimately made me stay there.
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At that point, just use their browser based products.
They have extensive “telemetry” either way.
If you check it and run it through a course and a decent one year guarantee, you should be fine. If it doesn’t fail then it won’t fail for quite some time.
Just make sure to put it in some RAID or parity
I just swapped my >10 year old WD Reds with refurbished used drives at 1/3 of the price, just because i need more space, these things last if you take some care.