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If you are behind CGNAT and use some tunnel (Wireguard, Tailscale, etc.) to access your services which are running on Docker containers, the attack vector is almost not existing.
If you are behind CGNAT and use some tunnel (Wireguard, Tailscale, etc.) to access your services which are running on Docker containers, the attack vector is almost not existing.
Do you really need multiple VMs, can’t you run all at one? The easiest would be to install some windows/Linux on a single machine. Then stream your games with Sunshine/Moonshine and connect over RDP/VPN?
https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted - just pick one or more services from the list and start looking into their documentation.
YouTube and the web are full of information and guides how you can do it. Me personally I would suggest you to use Docker container and Docker compose if possible. You can see how you can install Docker or Podman to run the containers.
So how usable is OLED for productivity and what WM/DM do you recommend?
I am toying with the idea of buying one, but people are saying that it sucks for productivity, and the text is less legible compared to IPS for example.
I am very much interested
Frigate or Bluetooth I guess
That’s why I also switched to Obsidian. Used it for a while, but the inability to port it to another app turned me off.
Hmmm, I tend to disagree. You know garbage in, garbage out.
I have not much experience with Gemini, but I used Pro 1.5 for analysing videos and it performed surprisingly well.
You mean OpenTofu, right?
Have you tried https://shadowsocks.org/? I don’t have any experience with it, but heard it is good at masquerading your traffic and making it almost impossible for your ISP to block it
The reality is that you won’t learn much just by reading, you need to try to debug stuff and eventually work in the area to truly learn.
But I am sure there are plenty of tutorials and video courses in various platforms where you can learn a bit on the topic. Coursera might be a good place to start as you can enroll for free to those courses if I am not wrong.
https://www.baeldung.com/linux/network-speed-testing try some of the options offered here.
You can also try rsync/rclone too and see how they perform.
SCP encrypts your traffic before sending it, so it might be CPU/RAM bottleneck. You can try with different cypher or different compression levels, which are defined in your .ssh/config
file.
Sorry in that case I would recommend you do iperf and see what the traffic would be. Make sure you whitelist the traffic as well.
Try to execute
ping -c 1000 1.1.1.1
And check for any packet loss and jitter.
Additionally I would also recommend trying a different test server and comparing the results.
Keep in mind that your ISP might also have issues with the connectivity which can be fixed in the following days.
If you ask me, Unraid went the Plex way, enshittification ensues.
CloudFlare
Looks pretty dope, care to share some dots?
Just changing the SSH port to non standard port would greatly reduce that risk. Disable root login and password login, use VLANs and containers whenever possible, update your services regularly and you will be mostly fine