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Yeah I don’t see the issue here. Don’t install a bunch of random plugins, set it up as recommended, and Nextcloud is just fine and has a nice mobile app and functions.
Yeah I don’t see the issue here. Don’t install a bunch of random plugins, set it up as recommended, and Nextcloud is just fine and has a nice mobile app and functions.
You can use something separate like Zoneedit for the DNS records
There’s at least two of us
That plus Helen Nissenbaum. When you read 1984 and then start thinking about the concept of future contexts changing use of private data, you get real nervous.
Old Motorolas, they really hate users.
Sort of. The activation license will work as long as you have it. They won’t renew support though, which effectively kills it when the support contract runs out.
Lol no, just old radios. My point is just that my requirements are pretty widely varied.
I’ve seen you recommending this here before - what’s its selling point vs say qemu-kvm? Does Incus do virtual networking without having to straight up learn iptables or whatever? (Not that there is anything wrong with iptables, I just have to choose what I can learn about)
Doesn’t mean anything right now if you are running ESXi, except you can’t reinstall ESXi unless you kept the image and you won’t get ESXi updates.
I need full on segregated machines sometimes though. I’ve got stuff that only runs in Win98 or XP (old radio programming software).
Admittedly I have not dug too deeply into Proxmox but its learning curve appears kinda steep.
Yeah I experimented with Truenas in a VM, it randomly dropped the pool. Do not do this.
I still have the inflatable penguin that came in the box
Try Zoneedit. I’ve had them for years and barely glanced at them.
How it is in Texas too.
Loool I’ll leave it
OpenSUSe. Tumbleweed as a rolling bistro is amazingly stable, yast is nice, and it all just works great. Leap for the servers, and things are solid.
Meanwhile, OpenSUSE keeps rolling along, ignored
You download the image (usually a .iso file) from the distro site then you have to get it onto the stick with a disk image writing program. And be sure when you figure it out that you are writing the image to the right disk!
Rufus was a good program I used, but search around. Windows may do it natively now.
They’re all headed that way. And Google wants to do it to PCs too.