I’ve been with namecheap a long long time now. They rarely raise prices and it’s usually because upstream costs go up and everyone is raising prices.
Refugee from Reddit after 11 years. Very happy to be here in the Fediverse and have no interest in going back.
I’ve been with namecheap a long long time now. They rarely raise prices and it’s usually because upstream costs go up and everyone is raising prices.
I’ve also never had that issue. It’s had quite a few updates since I started using it.
Netdata is great and easily deployed via docker. I ran it bare metal before and was also pleased if that’s your preference.
Yeah, the situation you’re describing is impossible with docker because if you set it up as intended there’s no way for your containers to access the Internet without going through the VPN.
I have been using this for months and really like it. But I will warn people how easy it well it works depends heavily on the provider and protocol you use.
I have some experiences below, but I would just ask the creator of Gluetun what they use because it will be the best documented and supported.
Cyberghost worked well with OpenVPN but they do not allow port forwarding so I switched to PureVPN. PureVPN was awful, they allow port forwarding but you have to use very specific servers and there’s no way to control that with Open VPN on Gluetun because the server list is not up to date. I tried Wireguard and it worked but the slightest connection drop would cause port forwarding to stop working and I would have to redo the connection with new keys and all every time. Eventually it just stopped working no matter what I did and support was kind enough to refund me. I asked for the remainder of my subscription and not only did they not try to argue they gave me a full refund so that’s points for PureVPN.
Right now I’m using AirVPN which works really well. Once in a while port forwarding will stop working. But if I switch to another port it works again, so I just keep two ports open and change things client side and that seems to be the path of least resistance.
Another nice feature of Gluetun is an http proxy you can enable. Handy for private trackers that only let you access it from one IP for downloading and browsing. Just use an automatic proxy switcher in your browser.
Edit: fixed that last bit that was typed off screen on my phone because the kbin mobile site was being funky.
How are you scrobbling to last.fm? Is it from substreamer or is there a plugin for Navidrome?
You can automatically replace the tracks downloaded from YouTube using Lidarr and set it to upgrade monitored albums until they’re FLAC.
But even then, it goes down to the manufacturing of that chip. RPi foundation chooses it because it’s built to a cost and they cannot afford outbid people for it. So again, manufacturing profits. Whether it’s because RPi cannot afford to pay more for those chips to get what they need, or factories are simply de-prioritizing those chips for others that make them more money.
The Raspberry Pi Foundation doesn’t own factories… They have to pay for manufacturing capacity and thus are limited in that capacity because their boards are built to a very strict cost that they seldom raise.
Because manufacturers prefer profits over the race to the bottom pricing strategy of many SBCs.
I do tone mapping just fine with a 1050 TI. It just happened to be what I had left over for my server and it works very well.
Contact Google support, I have no trouble port forwarding using the home app, other than their app is a bit cumbersome.
It’s an old joke.
Only two kinds of people believe in infinite growth; economists and psychopaths.
I think this has more to do with the refurbished small form factor business PCs eating up their market share as they flooded the market. I can get a decent i5 unit for $100and throw a $100 into it in upgrades and hit the same performance as their $300-400+ price range.
Because infinite growth of profits on a finite planet.
Well, there’s always the “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it” mantra. There’s a few reasons I tend to update. Because there’s a feature I want or need, to fix a big that affects me, or because a software frequently updates with breaking changes and keeping up with reading change logs is the best way to deal with that. The last option is usually because if I keep up with it I don’t have to read and fix multiple months of breaking changes.
What is driving you to need to update so often?
It depends on the project. If the project doesn’t make an effort to highlight them I would consider using a different one.
But any decent OSS will make a good change log for their updates that you can read.
You read breaking changes before you update things, that’s how.
No alt-text makes me sad. Can’t be an xkcd without it.