Fair enough
A small almond sailing the internet on a paper boat.
Fair enough
I mean… That’s what the webui I deployed has, the “guest mode login”, but it still makes those http requests to their servers :/
I managed to selfhost the web interface, but I encountered an issue that I don’t think I can fix…
I used this docker run command (not compose yet, just testing)
docker run -it --rm --name stremio-web -p 8080:8080 node:alpine sh -c """ apk add git git clone https://github.com/stremio/stremio-web --depth 1 cd stremio-web npm install npm run build npm install -g http-server http-server build/ -p 8080 -d false """
And I can reach the web ui. Now I can go into the settings page and set the backend url, which works perfectly. But when I go to the discover page nothing loads because it wants to reach stremio’s own servers.
Note: To access my selfhosted services I use a firefox profile that doesn’t have access to the internet, to be able to fully seflhost my stuff, that’s why the connection to their servers is blocked.
Is there a way to proxy these remote connections from the backend or am I just lost at this point?
Aye, thank you!
I want one so bad but I don’t know what wattage I should get for it
I have been running Immich since v1.1 to this day, and it has been flawless
You’re right I edited it now, thankfully I’m not a web dev, that would’ve been embarrassing
I almost bought the N2, but had a feeling the N3 was coming out and waited
Best html status code
Note: it can be selfhosted
It is not exactly ecc, you should check it out, I don’t remember what was different
I wonder the same, how is it that pretty? Op what software did you use?
That would be the plan, the NAS with ECC would run zfs with weekly scrubs (4 to 6 drives)
Edit: now running ECC on devices with critical data or databases
I was going to suggest the Pinetime, but it is far from close to what you’re asking. Have you looked at the Bangle.js 2 watch? It has GPS at least.
Immich is one of the foss projects that everyone should contribute money/time on it. It is great, stable and blazing fast.
occ files:scan --all (or something like that)