I thought Windows wouldn’t let you save it to the same drive? Its been a while, granted. But i had to plug in a USB or print it out.
Male, Dutch, HSP, INFJ, Into all things Tech and SciFi. Love my dogs and my birds.
I thought Windows wouldn’t let you save it to the same drive? Its been a while, granted. But i had to plug in a USB or print it out.
The problem is, knowing Microsft, its gonna be turned on by default. And half the people who use Windows barely know how to turn the computer on and off. Let alone dive deep into some half baked settings app to figure out where to turn it off.
But now that the cat’s out of the bag…
too many :) Here is a snippet of my RSS feed, save it as an xml file and most rss reeders should be able to import it :) https://pastebin.com/q0c6s5UF
All software has issued, such is the nature of software. I always say if you selfhost, at least follow some security related websites to keep up to date about these things :)
Its not hard really, and you shouldn’t be afraid to ask, if we don’t ask then we don’t learn :)
Look at Caddy webserver, it does automated SSL for you.
I know plenty of Linux professionals who are no beginners, but still prefer mint :)
Maybe somthing like Nextcloud?
My apologies, V is a new programming language based on Rust, Go and some others. I’ve been learning it a bit, and its fairly easy to learn, so i hope it has a bright future :)
Windows doesnt need systemD to break. Its perfectly capable of doing that without any outside help :) that was sort of my point ;-)
Try using Windows…
I’m not at home now, but i will try to remember to post you some links to rss feeds i follow :-)
It depends on what you want, but here is where i started:
I watched a lot of youtube videos about opensource software. Then i got a nice second hand server that was quiet and didnt use too much power. I installed ProxMox on it instead of VMware (opensource) and then i slowly started to build VM’s for whatever i wanted to selfhost.
A very important aspect that a lot of users ignore is security. You need to keep everything up to date. Follow sites with regards to your software (you can aelfhost freshrss. So thats a nice start) and keep “up” with cybersecurity.
These days i have a small server with Alpine installed on it. Since most my selfhosted things now come in docker. If you go that way, learn yourself everything anout docker and docker compose. Compose is a really powerful tool once you work with docker!
You dont. You install it on a Rasberry Pi for example, which you then connect to a tv screen :)
I use a GUI, selfhosted and web based instance of The Lounge. Ive been using it for a few years now and its wonderfull. I can be connected at all times without leaving my laptop on. Before that i used Hexchat, dIRC (was a wonderful client for windows, so mist have been around 2000) and mIRC, which i think is still one of the biggest clients.
Its been a while since i last read about it, but i thought they made some exempts so FOSS wouldnt suffer too much. One can only hope they did!
Have you tried it? If so, what is your opinion?
Ahh, never knew that!