The audio should not be affected, as far as I’m aware. I get all my stuff from Usenet
The audio should not be affected, as far as I’m aware. I get all my stuff from Usenet
Also check out Tdarr! I convert everything to HEVC using that. Shrinks down some files to literally 50% of their original size
Seems like the intro clears some things: https://gamevau.lt/docs/intro It looks like you install the server component on your NAS/server etc and store your game files/binaries/installers there. Then you can download client applications and download from that location to install on your gaming PC or whatever
And in general :) hopefully that helps. Can you hit the site directly (without caddy etc) after setting up the DNS name in pihole?
If you’re trying to use pihole as a local DNS, you’ll still have to add your application port to the end of the URL if you’re not doing that already. So like if you’ve assigned server.local to your host server in pihole, to get to your app you would have to do http://server.local:1234, where 1234 is your app port number.
Otherwise, I have this all working with a code-server instance behind SWAG reverse proxy and Authelia authentication over the internet, if you need further help with that.
I was looking at that. It does look interesting. I’m installing it now from git, will see how it goes.
very nice, will look into it!
oh thanks! I was looking for this on awesome-selfhosted. I must be blind
My flow is GoodReads (tracking/requesting) -> Readarr (manage downloads) -> Calibre (manage library/metadata) -> Calibre-Web (user friendly browsing/serving) and then I can send to kindle or download or whatever from Caliber-Web. I download from Usenets/Libgen/Openbooks
This is what I expect from something that is “hosted” as well. I would like to access the hosted app from any machine on my network with a single installation/setup, and potentially expose it for private access from the Internet.
Ok I think we have a winner! Got draw.io up and running on my server, and so far it has everything I need, and the UI is perfect. Thank you for the suggestion!
I read through the introduction but feel like I don’t fully understand or grasp the point of this… Is this just basically a new type of p2p protocol? They reference local-first or local-only apps, but then what’s the difference between that and just a locally hosted server with local DNS etc? And what would an example of “ephemeral data” be? If it is actually “ephemeral”, wouldn’t you have to connect somewhere to use it whenever you need it anyway? I’m probably just not grasping the foundational aspects and ideas of this
I use Uptime Kuma for monitoring instance availability. When something goes down, I get a pushover notification. You can customize what defines the instance as “down” as well as customize notifications on many providers. I also use Homepage as my dashboard, which has some nice API integrations, including Uptime Kuma. Provides a nice at a glance view of everything. I’m sure you should be able to do something similar with Dashy
Hmm I already have an OnlyOffice server linked to my Nextcloud, but OnlyOffice doesn’t have an equivalent application. Maybe I’ll look into changing the stack to LibreOffice
Ok that’s pretty cool. Thank you!
Thanks I’ll take a look!
I guess it doesn’t need to be self-hosted, but it would be nice. I’ll check these out! Thanks for the suggestions!
Congrats! I’ve been using pi-alert for a couple months now and love it!
Absolutely would be happy to! Shoot me a DM with what you have and what you’re having trouble with, and I can try to help you out.
Thanks for calling those points out! You are 100% correct. I think I take it for granted that at this point, all of this “just works” on my setup :)