There is a subscribe button, it’s directly below the channel name. Up until recently there was a bug in invidious preventing it working but it looks like that’s been resolved now.
There is a subscribe button, it’s directly below the channel name. Up until recently there was a bug in invidious preventing it working but it looks like that’s been resolved now.
It’d be worth checking out Borg as an alternative to rsync. Borg will handle snapshotting, and automatically de-dupe on a block-by-block basis.
I use it for all of my remote backups, and it provides a lot of quality of life stuff that rsync isn’t going to handle.
I had a reasonably good time with it. I had issues with btrfs, which is why I moved off it and went to Fedora IoT for pretty much the same benefits.
For me, btrfs caused multiple drive corruptions because of unexpected power offs, and I didn’t feel like trying to fix that on the fly - it might have been drives that were incompatible with CoW because of firmware “optimisations” that break if a write isn’t completed prior to power off.
In general, outside of that, it was pretty solid. I didn’t find much use for the orchestration/setup tooling they include, and I found their documentation pretty sporadic unfortunately. Fedora IoT has the advantage of basically being silverblue, with rpm-ostree, so it’s easy to find people using it and discussing it.
Are you expecting sonarr to go after historical stuff? You have to manually request a search for anything added that isn’t being released in the future. Sonarr only automatically checks for new episodes, not old ones. Like others have said, season searches and interactive searches are useful for anything that’s not airing in the future.
But their internet is down, so it’ll fail to send to telegram. Realistically it needs to be an external system that is tracking when it receives pings from the home network, so it can show periods where the bash script didn’t ping for a while.
My favourite one is renaming a directory full of files in nnn
. It opens in vim, and I’m in my happy place, where I really know how to edit text (or, in this case, filenames). Great when there’s some minor variation between a lot of files. Full previewing before saving, multiple operations handled before doing anything etc.
Yep, the app is by far the easiest way to deal with it, and it’s got a great amount of troubleshooting options too.
There are speed and developer experience improvements, and a whole bunch of it is there to optimise for mobile. They have some info in the FAQ on jmap.io. It’s something I won’t 100% take without any consideration - it is written by the fastmail Devs - but a modern stateless protocol is no bad thing.
I’m also on Migadu for email, and I can say the experience has been pretty excellent. They have good instructions for setup stuff, and their pricing model is great. The pricing model has things in common with rsync.net, where they impose a soft limit on storage and reach out if you start exceeding it to talk about upgrading.
I do wonder if other mail providers will at some stage support jmap, it seems like it could take away some frustrations.
ZigBee devices are often able to be used with a 3rd party hub. For instance, all the IKEA stuff works with any standard ZigBee hub. They don’t have a line to the internet if you control the hub.
Check out borgbackup, it stores changes only, snapshots are created for every new backup, encrypts automatically and is pretty straightforward to use.
A PR was opened last week to add the biggest first element of external library support. Hopefully in the relatively near future it’ll be merged. I’ll be giving it a shot when it merges.
Maybe around 2006, I booted a live CD of Ubuntu and ran the 6 disc install of Unreal Tournament 2004 so that I could play UT with a friend who was staying over - the laptop was my mum’s, so I wasn’t allowed to install anything directly on it. UT2004 had a native Linux version on disc.
The install took until 4am and we played until the sun came up, absolute bliss getting it working.
Sure, fair enough. There are other distros supported by the community if you want to check that out too.
You honestly won’t find better than the support for framework in the laptop space. The arch wiki entry for it is fantastic, and having multiple supported distros is almost unique.
Those are the officially supported distros. You can install other ones just fine. I doubt you’d find another laptop that had even just more than 1 officially supported distro.
Ah, I did the bad thing and didn’t read properly.
It looks correct, yes. Can you run iptables -L -t nat
on the public host after bringing up the wireguard connection to see if it works?
Also, if you can do a netcat to that same port from a local computer to that public endpoint without the wireguard connection running, you can test that the port isn’t being blocked anywhere else along the way.
You have to have a firewall rule on your public server to tell it to send any traffic on port 8096 to the IP of your private server. Currently, your public server isn’t listening on that port, so the packets would just be dropped.
The Noctua NH-L9a-AM4 is an excellent cooling solution that juuuust fits in the case. One thing to just clarify is that the deskmini requires a GPU - it can’t be run headless at all.
It really is excellent. It’s my home server and it hasn’t broken a sweat running dozens of services. Jellyfin can use the GPU for video transcoding on the fly too, so that helps make that not a complete waste.
You’re welcome. It has some really nice side-effects - i.e. if I want to quickly grab a file without it being from my normal IP, I can just SSH to the right user on my server and it just works - no configuration, no needing to interrupt other traffic.
Are you not logged in? You need to have an account logged in, subscriptions are stored server-side.
Edit: Ah, I see that you’ve found that out. Good you got it sorted!