People normally warn against dual booting because of the headaches it can cause - you went and fucked up with triple boot.
People normally warn against dual booting because of the headaches it can cause - you went and fucked up with triple boot.
Because if anybody gets mad at it, they have deniability
“Halt and Catch Fire” was pretty good!
From Wikipedia:
It depicts a fictionalized insider’s view of the personal computer revolution of the 1980s and the early days of the World Wide Web in the early 1990s.
What’s the niche industry?
I use TempleOS btw
It’s pretty easy to do, I set it up using this guide: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qlcVx-k-02E
“crack enthusiast” is wild
They reduced the free option from 5 nodes to 3 a while back. Looks like only the people who had the 5 node license received that email.
At first I naively thought “why is that a bad thing?”, but then realized who exactly decides what these “national interests” are?
Definitely using some “weasel words” in their policy to get away with some shady shit.
Nice rice
Wdym, their burgers and chicken tendies are pretty good
Wireguard is even easier
Yeah, it’s definitely more enticing.
“You’re telling me if I inhale this, it tastes like donuts!?”
😂
Any doctor will tell you that breathing anything other than air is harmful. Vaping is far and away less harmful than cigarettes, and when used for their intended purpose (smoking cessation), they are absolutely the “healthier” option.
Why are you manually running backups? Script it and run as a cron job
Why do you need to cast to it? An Android TV device like the one I mentioned can just play that content.
Yes, I use subdomains.
I pay for one domain name in Cloudflare (e.g. awesomedomain.com
), and have a single “A” record pointing to the public IP of my server, and a single “CNAME” record with a value of *
that points to awesomedomain.com
.
That way, any subdomain gets directed to the server, and then you setup Nginx Proxy Manager to listen for certain subdomains and where to proxy them. No need to manage any further DNS records in Cloudflare, and any changes made on the proxy don’t need any wait time for DNS records to propagate.
Nginx Proxy Manager also handles automatic SSL certs through Let’s Encrypt - I really can’t recommend it enough.
Sounds like you don’t have port forwarding setup.
I highly recommend setting up Nginx Proxy Manager and using it as a reverse proxy.
I have lots of services, but using a reverse proxy means I only have to expose 2 ports (80 & 443) and then I can serve whatever I want, like Plex, over https without a relay.
I have an edgecellent solution for that