gccalvin

joined 1 year ago
[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 12 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

Anyone else think we need a new unofficial desktop client? I don't think the main one gets that many updates anymore. The last couple of updates were just to make it work with 10.9.x. There are 312 open issues. I wish I had the ability to help merge PR's. Not that it's a buggy mess, but some updates would be nice. Glad to see we get plenty of contending mobile apps though.

[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

Thank you for the compilation, I'll take a look at these.

 

Any recommendations for a good non-subscription-based alternative? I could setup syncthing for files, and I have URbackup for images, but I always relied on Macrium more than URbackup. What do other people use?

Why have you removed the one-time license option?

Many of our home customers' feedback indicated a preference for the certainty provided by an annual plan. The annual plan offers assurance that you always have access to the latest version with innovations such as improvements we’ve made in compression speeds and algorithms. It also ensures you have access to critical updates and are protected against new threats and risks. Lastly, our annual plan ensures you always have access to technical support (one-time licenses only offer 12 months of support).

[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

My group is on Teamspeak. They are supposedly adding it this year, but it's been radio silence for months.

[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago

You're right, thanks.

[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 5 points 1 month ago

Good perspective, thanks.

[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago (2 children)

That's fair. I'm making the comparison to other hobbies. If someone is not interested in roller skating, but decides to try it out because one of their friends really likes it and invites them, they may find they enjoy it... or not, which in that case they won't go again, which is fine. Alternatively, they find a new hobby they enjoy, and selfhosting could give skills that turn into a potential career, but that's if they really enjoy it. I don't think it's uncommon for friend groups to have outsiders (me) and "force" them into trying new things, but maybe my comparison doesn't hold up here as this is a bit less about socializing.

 

Most of my friends are in tech, and I think one of them would enjoy hosting their own services if they got into it. Currently, I do most of our hosting, from media servers to game servers, but I think the hardest part is to give people an enticement to host.

For example, maybe they saw the lights automatically come on through the use of home automation like Home Assistant or maybe they wanted to control their own music library.

I think the idea of managing your own hardware and services doesn't become enjoyable until you've already seen the outcome, such as having a resource or service available to you that you didn't before. When I first got into selfhosting, I also had the problem with identifying what I wanted to host.

How do/did you get your friends interested in selfhosting? What services did they look into hosting themselves?

I'm not going to force someone into a hobby they aren't interested in, I'm just curious how people brought the conversation up.

Thanks.

[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Would you be willing to explain what a typed dictionary is and when it would be useful in the context of Godot?

[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 9 points 3 months ago (1 children)

For those that want an RTS game that doesn't require a high APM, I'd recommend Supreme Commander Forged Alliance (FAF) and the Sins of a Solar Empire Games (which requires an even lower APM).

[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 12 points 4 months ago (3 children)

I know there are different use cases for each, but generally do people prefer self hosted nextcloud, proton docs, or libre office?

[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 1 points 4 months ago

No, development is still stalled. You need to pay if you want the really high bit rate flac downloads. I pay and can use Deezer as a backup to Jellyfin in the event there's a song I don't have and I'm driving. I was looking at music fab, but it's expensive, the Spotify downloader has worse quality, and doesn't grab the cover art, which is probably a deal breaker for me.

[–] gccalvin@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I use the former. How does it compare to the other two?

 

Usually, I'd aim for the cloud environments for public resources (serving more than like 20 people), as the traffic won't be hitting your home network.

Additionally, selfhosting a public service like Lemmy on your home environment probably wouldn't have the same uptime or reliability, as I only have one strong ISP signal, and no backup generator.

However, pricing wise, selfhosting at home is much cheaper for the processing power you get.

 

If you register a domain with Cloudflare or Route 53, and that service goes down, do your records stay active in the DNS servers? What if the DNS servers go down, I know a lot of people use 8.8.8.8, so if Google's server goes down, then DNS fails?

What are the potential point of failures for having your own domain?

 

Voice channels similar to discord and Teamspeak, where you don't need to "call" the people you want to talk to, you just join the channel. Is this a feature in Matrix?

Thanks.

 

As r/selfhosted seems to have shutdown due to the reddit api changes (rip), I wanted to see if anyone has worked with these services before?

How do they compare to Discord and how hard is it to maintain, as the setup looks pretty in depth for matrix and synapse. How did you convince your user base to use it over Discord.

I've hosted TS3 for about 8 years and are looking for alternatives, as we have to use Discord for screen sharing.

Thanks!

view more: next ›