Does for me.
openpgp4fpr:358e81f6a54dc11eaeb0af3faa742fdc5afe2a72
Does for me.
I use Rallly.
Ahhh… very good. I avoided all this by running Pihole on its own IP on the LAN using a bridged interface from the host.
This post from Stack Exchange might help you, switching 80 for 53, of course.
You don’t need UDP on port 80 forwarded through. HTTP is TCP only.
Nextcloud does all of this.
Yes but it’s hard work.
I did it from the other side of the planet. I accidentally ran an rm -rf ...
command on a running system. Luckily I had an identical system running that I could use to copy over the files, devices, etc.
Learning about inodes and /proc/xxx/fd
works, I was able to recover enough files to then copy over the rest from the other system.
Doing it over SSH from the other side of the world was a tough 14 hours.
E2EE chat.
AudioBookshelf ticks all those requirements.
Banking, most likely (depending on the bank).
Google Pay/Wallet/whatever-it’s-called-today, no.
Third Room by matrix.org does all of this.
I’m wrong? You’re saying that IP addressing is one of the most complicated things about computers/networking?
There’s a difference between corporate IT and being a computer geek.
I agree that many IT careers are relatively simple support jobs.
They mentioned computer geeks which implies, to me, people who are deep into computers. In that light, if you’re struggling with concepts of IP addressing then the more-complicated facets of computers and networks will preclude you from an engineering role.
I’m not gate-keeping. I’m simply suggesting that IP addressing is one of the less-complicated things when it comes to computer-geekery.
If you’re a computer geek (even a professional one) and struggle with IP addressing, you won’t be having much of a career.
Enshittification at its finest.
Wrong type of POST.
It would mean you’re entrusting the entire security of your network to Dockge’s authentication system.
… and for that reason, I’m out.