OP hasn’t met 17-bean soup yet.
OP hasn’t met 17-bean soup yet.
Ghost has a lot of these features as well as being a blog and handling paid subscriptions and donations.
You use an IMAP syncer, like this one:
A word of caution: I professionally hosted email for over a decade.
90% or incoming email will be spam. Anti-spam tools will need regular updates. Backups are also super important.
All things considered, I don’t host my own email anymore although I know all the pieces involved.
There are also some independent email hosts that are good like Fastmail or for extra privacy, Proton Mail.
If the emails live on your server, can’t you use software there to send, receive and search emails?
There aren’t log visualizers for every artisanal log file format. But there’s a movement towards supporting JSON format logs for more services, and lots tools that can understand JSON logs making generating graphs and metrics from arbitrary logs fairly efficient.
If this tool is making the logs harder to parse by using a custom format, that’s something the tool could improve.
Some apps support both plaintext logs for humans and JSON logs for tools.
I recommend generating some metrics from the logs and graphing them yourself.
Perhaps the free Grafana plan would have what you need to parse the log files and visualize the metrics you want.
Where can I find docs about Albert’s support for dmenu features? I didn’t find any mention on the Albert website.
I saw that Albert supports plugins and extensions but couldn’t find a list of the plugins and extensions were.
Also, these days the LLMs are fairly good are writing Ansible code, but I wouldn’t expect them to be good are more architectural decisions about how to split up your project into roles or various config files-- still a useful tool to speed up the work!
It’s possible that wofi’s HTML and CSS support allow for some visual effects the others don’t.
Wofi was updated by the author 13 hours ago:
https://hg.sr.ht/~scoopta/wofi
The banner says “This project is not being actively maintained. It does still receive some updates from time to time but nothing frequent.”
It’s fine for a project to reach “maturity” and quit getting updated much, but the Wofi docs, interface and features still seem like they could use some polish.
It’s open source, so anyone else is always welcome to use the current state as a base to build on if they prefer to.
Aside from Wofi’s support for Pango/HTML/CSS, I don’t see a reason to use it over Fuzzel, though.
I also use Ansible to automate setting up a homeserver. I like that it servers as both documentation and backup.
I’m not sure I would learn Ansible just to automate one server, but as I already learn and use Ansible at work, this was pretty efficient for me.
Look at how Dynamic DNS supported. Does it require full access to the account-- dangerous-- by using your login credentials or an API token with full read/write access? Or does it over a very limited scope access that gives the Dynamic DNS tool precisely the access it needs to update a single DNS record-- much safer! The latter is what CloudDNS does.
There are two services involved. Domain registration and DNS. Most domain registrars now provide some free DNS service, with basic features. I monitor dozens of domains, and I can tell you that these free DNS services with registrars are most likely to have short DNS outages as well.
ClouDNS is a professional, high-quality DNS service and that does one thing well. As far as I can tell, they don’t do domain registration, so that will always be a separate service. One of the things that ClouDNS does well is making Dynamic DNS easier.
Domain.com sounds like a domain registrar. You would keep that service and point your name servers for the domain to the ClouDNS name servers.
ClouDNS makes DDNS easy for a low cost for 1-5 domains.
DDoSing cost the attacker some time and resources so there has to something in it for them.
Random servers on the internet are subject to lots of drive-by vuln scans and brute force login attempts, but not DDoS, which are most costly to execute.
Other efficiency benchmarks place Apple Silicon and AMD chips ahead of Intel chips:
https://www.cpu-monkey.com/en/cpu_benchmark-cpu_performance_per_watt
I’ve donated to marcan to work on Asahi Linux, which gets upstreamed. That’s direct.
What has better performance per watt than M1 at a better price?
I tried a USB KVM switcher. I only recall there were serious issues and it didn’t last long.
Now I use a high quality USB dock and physically unplug/re-replug a work and personal laptop. That’s been a simple and reliable solution.
For my home server, I ssh into it.