Appoxo

joined 1 year ago
[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 2 hours ago

Regarding the red stoplight:
In Germany we have a rule that you may turn right if theres a sign permitting you to do so. In that case the traffic light is to be treated like a STOP-sign.

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 2 hours ago

I have seen thqt zero times.
But tbf I don't live in a big metropolitan area.

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

Hoping real hard that Alternate Carbon is not becoming reality.

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Hell I use my garden diary selfhosted service via a wepapp (hortusfox).
Just put a direct link on my homescreen. With the included favicon it almost looks like a native app.

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 12 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Also desktop mode to circumvent those phone detection systems and trying to force an app.

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 15 hours ago

Knew I forgot a major language tree. Yes Arabic and it's various forms are certainly important as well. Certainly a rich history.

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 1 day ago

That's exactly what I am doing. Bought something from them (ugh) 3 times this year. All something my brick and mortar store either pulled from inventory and doesnt sell anymore, more expensive elsewhere or just damn convenience since it's bigger at the store and thus cumbersome to transport or too expensive or both.

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Aint "Open" actually burned-in?

Btw: For linebreaks you need to spaces after the Enter

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 1 day ago

Das ist beeindruckend genug :)

tl.: That's impressive enough :)

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I'd believe the biggest (excluding English) DLC unlocks are:
Chinese (dunno which dialect/version of it. Mandarin?)
Japanese
Portuguese
Spanish
And maybe some other overarching language that have commonalities with other language like a slavic language (afaik polish shares some words with russian or croatian?)

[–] Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 day ago

Dunno what's arcane about setting your network up once, crrate the compose (jn my case regular docker) and write sudo docker compose up -d.
Literally using Linux in any way shape or form is more arcane than this.
Just recently learning about NFS sharing. Sure, let's write the config in /etc/export and also edit the fstab config on the guest to auto-mount it. Don't forget the whole syntax ;)

Not the mention the 100 different ways of setting up a static IP in each distro which differs slightly in any package/distro

 

Background

Hello fellow self-hosters and homelabbers, A few weeks ago I was able to fill my new NAS with the proper hardware I needed to expand on my earlier setup.
Due to the new capabilities I also wanted a fresh restart. But the more I think about doing one thing, the more I hit other road blocks amd think about doing Y.
So I wanted to ask how you would solve my goal.

My current (main) setup:

  • Hardware: 11th Gen i5 Nuc with a 8TB HDD attached via USB
  • OS: Debian 11
  • Software: OMV6 for management and Docker for a diverse set of containers
  • Current containers: HortusFox + MongoDB, *arrs-stack, Jellyfin, uptime kuma, unifi network application + mariaDB, traefik, wallos

Current available hardware for use:

1x 13th gen i3 NUC running Proxmox 8.2
1x 11th gen i5 NUC
1x uGreen DXP4800+ NAS with 4x15TB HDDs in Raidz2. The OS is TrueNAS scale

My plans:

  • NAS storage made accessible via NFS to the proxmox VE.
  • NAS storage mainly planned as mass-storage for Jellyfin.
  • Reimage my 11th gen NUC with a bare-metal Debian install for Docker.
    (I will not virtualize on the 11th Gen NUC because I can't pass the iGPU to the VM and not really interested in LXC containers)

Problems and questions I have at this moment:

1: Should I do a media-storage VM only utilized for serving media and do the computing on another VM or do a general VM for both?

  • Upside to an all-in-one VM: Less problems with serving storage between many different nodes and keeping it organized.
    Upside to specialized VMs (storage & compute VM): Better focus on ressources like CPU and RAM.
    2: Should I place my whole docker stack again on the 11th Gen NUC or place the stacks in their own VM(s)? Example:
    service stack in service-focused VM
    media-focused stack in media VM (which also serves the files for jellyfin)
    Jellyfin bare-metal/dockerized on NUC 11th Gen

I hope someone can maybe help me untangle my grown mess and plans. My skills with Linux are not very deep and very beginner level. If you are willing to help please be patient with stupid questions.

If you have any better solutions, pointers to research, (blog) articles on architecting such solutions, examples how you solved storage/management or just willing to help me, I'd be very grateful :)

 

So often they go end of sale. Once gone and restocked I will hoard it.

 

Hello fellow selfhosters, I tried to find a piece of software that could achieve my goal but maybe I am not searching in the correct areas. So I thought of asking here for suggestions or directions I could take.

What I am looking for:

I am looking for software that could fill a purpose of tracking like a helpdesk ticketing portal but not be a full blown ticketing portal.
For example I want to track current tasks like an RMA I am doing right now with Logitech (currently organized in my email inbox/folders) or keep track of shipments (currently tracked in Google Keep in this format: Shop | MM YYYY | Order-ID | Contents | Tracking:<Shipping Number>)

Features I am specifically looking for:

  • Tracking items (like shipments)
  • Keep track of issues (fix light bulb), Tasks (go to citizen office to renew ID),
    • Optionally: Keeping communication like E-Mails (like go back and see the communication history with Logitech concerning the RMA#999999)

Platforms I use:

Android and Windows.

What I have found so far and seemed to fit:

How I am coming to the conclusion I need something like that

  • As mentioned earlier, I keep track of some stuff like shipments, overtime todo, money I am owing or someone does owe me in Google Keep. It kinda works but I feel like I am straining the borders of it's use case. And I fear Googles Graveyard
  • I keep track of my e-mails via folders (to some extent). But I will probably not find the email of communication I had 5 months ago with that system.
    At work we use a classic ticket helpdesk system. I can more or less find the ticket of an issue a customer had on the phone and correlate it with the problem I have right now.
  • Some of my knowledge base is in Obsidian.md for technical stuff or minor stuff like "find x here", while the stuff related for real life (e.g. recipes) are stored in OneNote.
    It's not necessary to consolidate it but maybe I can remove some of each into the new system?

What I would like to avoid:

Things like creating companies to track tickets with. I would rather just keep track of the issue (maybe with some form of history to go back in time?) and not be lost in endless classification of company number, telephone, contacts etc.

Maybe I am in search of a unicorn-glitter edition^tm^ and just need someone to tell me that doesn't exist or I am not looking for the correct thing or term.
The help is highly appreciated :)

PS: While preferred it doesn't need to be selfhosted. It should be accessible via smartphone (app or web doesnt really matter) and on desktop (program or web).

Update:

Currently in consideration are (thanks for the suggestions so far!):

  • OpenProject
  • Focalboard
  • Vikunja
  • Tarallo
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