lemmyvore

@lemmyvore@feddit.nl

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Can I pre-install Ubuntu on an SSD?

Ths might be a silly question, but asking those is how i learn sometimes. I’m trying to install my first Linux distro to set up a Plex server and one of the few things I know is you need a wired internet connection. My intended server location is across the house from my router, and there isnt much room there to set up...

lemmyvore, (edited )

If you don’t authenticate through Plex don’t you lose profile support? Meaning no personalized preferences, no watch list, no parental controls etc.

For me that would make it unusable.

lemmyvore,

It’s not true. I mean sure there are companies that try to lock you into their platforms but there’s no grand conspiracy of the lizard people the way OP makes it sound.

Different people want different things from software. Professionals may prefer rootless podman or whatever but a home user probably doesn’t have the same requirements and the same high bar. They can make do with regular docker or with running things on the metal. It’s up to each person to evaluate what’s best for them. There’s no “One True Way” of hosting software services.

lemmyvore,

Manjaro has issues with the aur.

Not this again. Please stop parroting this, it’s ridiculous and it only says “I don’t know how AUR works”.

How often do you back up?

I was wondering how often does one choose to make and keep back ups. I know that “It depends on your business needs”, but that is rather vague and unsatisfying, so I was hoping to hear some heuristics from the community. Like say I had a workstation/desktop that is acting as a server at a shop (taking inventory / sales...

lemmyvore,

Se if you can get a DVD or Blu-ray writer and backup stuff to DVD or Blu-ray discs. If you keep the discs in individual jewel cases or in a disc wallet they keep very well.

Self-hosted or personal email solutions?

I have a unique name, think John Doe, and I’m hoping to create a unique and “professional” looking email account like johndoe@gmail.com or john@doe.com. Since my name is common, all reasonable permutations are taken. I was considering purchasing a domain with something unique, then making personal family email accounts for...

lemmyvore,

Can you not transfer away a domain from Google as you would from any other registrar? And then set the MX records to point at another mail service?

lemmyvore,

I have a bunch of users (friends and family) on a bunch of different domains. It’s honestly not so bad but yeah, you need a decent dedicated service.

Migrations aren’t simple but aren’t that complicated either (just did one last year).

I mainly need to copy their email over but it’s also a good moment to check they’re using decent passwords and to have them freshen it.

I also need to update their webmail and IMAP/SMTP URLs in their bookmark/email apps but I’ve been playing with DNS CNAMEs for this purpose and it’s mostly working ok (aliasing one of my domains to the provider’s so I only have to update the DNS which I do anyway for a mail migration).

lemmyvore,

Wait, does this mean you’re giving Gmail the password for the other mailbox?

lemmyvore,

Well yes but normally the email client lives on my phone or PC so nobody else knows my email logins.

lemmyvore, (edited )

They can’t make it closed source retroactively (well, technically you can design a license like that but that’s a different discussion and the most widely used open source licenses aren’t made like that). They can relicense at some point going forward, but all the code up to that point would still be available under the old license and contributors could fork and continue without batting an eye.

lemmyvore,

It depends on what license the project is using. Some licenses are very permissive, meaning there’s lots of ways they can be abused. For example with MIT/BSD licenses there’s no provision to share the code with the final product so they could drag their feet releasing parts of the code or hide them altogether. They could also resort to tivoization, NDAs, commercial plugins and all kinds of shenanigans.

Look for example to the Plex and Emby projects which were originally open and went commercial later. The way they did it is why there’s a lot of bad blood in the community to this day.

I’ve also personally been involved with other projects where someone tried to take them commercial in a less than graceful way, shall we say. It’s never pretty.

lemmyvore,

If they can find a kernel exploit they might find a hardware exploit too. There’s no rational reason to assume containers are more likely to fail than VMs, just bias.

Oh and you can fix a kernel exploit with an update, good luck fixing a hardware exploit.

Now you’re probably going to tell me how a hardware exploit is so unlikely but since we’re playing make believe I can make it as likely it suits my argument, right?

lemmyvore,

You don’t design security solutions on the premise that they’re not working.

lemmyvore,

What chipset does the adapter use? Check lsusb or dmesg.

Try adding a Manjaro install ISO with Ventoy, it works very well in live CD mode.

lemmyvore,

I was thinking more about the basics, like USB input and getting the image+sound. For that you could get away with a special USB cable and a capture card. I’m just not aware of any software for it, I don’t think the original PiKVM stuff was ever ported to PC.

lemmyvore,

So this board allows you to remotely control the PC you put it in?

Is there a reverse project, that allows a PC to act as a PiKVM for another PC or laptop so they can be controlled remotely?

lemmyvore, (edited )

Of course it can. And your PC can also fall off the desk. I’m saying a snapshot tool is a really poor solution for distro problems, it’s really a bandaid for a problem that shouldn’t exist.

Use a decent distro, take proper backups, and use snapshots for what they were intended — recovering small mistakes with personal files, not for system maintenance.

lemmyvore,

Packages can break, not the distro. Packages can break at any time because there’s thousands of them and nobody can check all of them thoroughly. A rolling distro gets you both the bugs and the fixes faster.

Non-apt and non-rolling will limit your options considerably.

lemmyvore,

You make a good point. Ubuntu gives you so many ways to shoot yourself in the foot that it’s pretty much a given that it will get messed up eventually. So you have to use snapshots.

On Arch based distros the updates just work. I’ve never had to snapshot anything. But having just one single community repo (AUR) contributes to that a great deal.

lemmyvore,

A major distro breaking your system is the equivalent of a flower pot falling on your head walking down the street. Does it happen? Sure. Do I want to spend my life wearing a motorcycle helmet and looking up all the time? No.

I’m not saying distros can’t crap on you, I’m saying stop tolerating it. Raise a stink or switch distro. There are distros out there where you don’t have to live in constant fear and where nothing happens if you don’t have snapshots.

I do have backups, precisely because shit happens. But there’s a difference between a helmet and health insurance.

lemmyvore,

And a filesystem snapshotting tool would help you restore bootloader how?..

lemmyvore,

Yeah that’s why I use Nvidia, because AMD drivers are super stable.

lemmyvore,

They’ve announced they’re trialing the custom app currently, after which they’ll discontinue the IMAP/SMTP bridge.

lemmyvore,

That’s a very broad question that depends a lot on your usage. My needs may be different from yours.

I’m currently using Migadu because:

  • Unlimited domains, mailboxes, accounts and aliases for a flat fee. I’m managing accounts for myself as well as family and extended family members and it comes out much cheaper this way than services that ask $5-10/account.
  • Very nice management interface with all the bells and whistles but with reasonable defaults and easy to use.
  • The company is based in Switzerland and the mail hosted in EU (France).
  • Standard email service with everything you’d expect (the regular protocols, spam protection, webmail, full compatibility with clients etc.)
lemmyvore,

It’s in restricted beta currently, only available to a small category of users, and still lacking features. They say it will launch early 2024 but it looks more like mid-year to me (at best).

Point is, it won’t happen very soon, but it will happen

lemmyvore,

I don’t self host my email either. I got my registrar, DNS and email separate from each other so if any of them goes bad I can switch with minimum fuss.

But that makes it all the more important to be able to download all your mail from your provider.

Proton currently has two proprietary things you can use to download, a “bridge” PC app that pretends to speak IMAP, and a download tool. The bridge will be discontinued after they launch their propeietary PC mail app so that leaves just the proprietary download tool, which only does .eml. format.

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