I’m liking ente for photos at the moment.
immich had too many breaking changes.
I’m liking ente for photos at the moment.
immich had too many breaking changes.
I’m pretty young, so I never used floppy before
How do you kids keep getting on my lawn.
Should have used 2549 for the QoS update.
Navidrome can have multiple users. I don’t know that they can each have separate libraries though.
I ended up with 8 or 9 VMs that run 8 or 9 dockers. It works great, but it’s more to manage.
It’s more overhead on the cpu, but it’s so easy.
It has a repo with programs you can install. The selection is fairly limited though.
http://wiki.tinycorelinux.net/doku.php?id=wiki:install_apps
That computer is in the basement and I’m not having any luck finding a list of what’s available.
Tiny Core would probably run on it.
I have it on a PII 333MHz with 192MB of RAM from 1999. It grinds to a halt if I try to open pretty much any modern website though.
I’m not sure what exactly you consider “core rules” but GPL3 also puts stipulations on how software can be used and who can use it but I doubt you would be complaining about that.
I’m also not a lawyer, but I don’t see how a license that says “if you’re an individual, do whatever you want” is going to stop someone with good intentions from contributing.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person or organization (the “User”) obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the “Software”), to use, copy, modify, merge, distribute, and/or sell copies of the Software, subject to the following conditions:
The conditions they attach are essentially, don’t use it for corporate profit or law enforcement.
It’s not a BSD license, but if you’re an individual you can do whatever you want with it.
Huh? It is.
Embrace, extend, extinguish
Popfile was pretty great. Sadly it was abandoned 8 years ago.
The “no public access” made me think a local option would suffice.
There’s noteself as a self hosted version.
I used it for a while but ended up moving to Joplin to be able to share notes with family. Noteself/Tiddly seemed like a better fit for your described use case though.
I’ve done it before, but there’s always a lot of googling involved.
I think a combination of vgdisplay
and vgextend
may help: https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/resize-lvm-simple
If sda3 is really <100GB it gets a lot scarier but is likely still doable.
I’m not a fan of Proxmox’s partitioning scheme and usually use a separate drive for the OS and the VMs because of this exact scenario.
Edit: nevermind, sda3 is already being used. The lv group needs to be embiggened.
There is. It seemed like every time I opened it, either it or the server needed to be updated though.