Dredge! I played it entirely on Steam Deck, and it was a great, relaxing, intriguing experience. Would recommend
Devops Engineer | Linux and OSS enthusiast | Gaming, Homelab, and 3D Printing
Dredge! I played it entirely on Steam Deck, and it was a great, relaxing, intriguing experience. Would recommend
I wouldn’t say so. Admins run the site, moderators run communities. This happens to be a community with an admin as a mod.
Oh motherfucker
AirVPN I guess then
ProtonVPN has dynamic port forwarding via a Windows client (or a python script if on Linux). Just a heads up, since it could be awkward to work out if you’re downloading from a headless server.
I’ve heard AirVPN is good. I switched to iVPN and I’m satisfied
I’d love to, but there’s no equivalent. My friend group and I need voice channels with ACL, streaming support, video chat support, and webhook/bot support.
As someone who never followed the marketing material and had a high end PC: I was expecting Witcher 3 in Night City, and that’s exactly what I got
I understand that plenty of people were disappointed by the missing features and the stuff they outright lied about, but I had fun with it. Probably a 7.5/10 at launch for me.
I use a VPS as a homelab gateway of sorts from the outside.
Essentially, the VPS runs a Wireguard server that I connect to on my OPNSense Router. The VPS then reverse-proxies all incoming traffic through the tunnel to my homelab. All my DNS entries point to the VPS’s IP. This pretty much gives me a static IP, hides my real IP, and lets me do some light caching on the VPS. Kind of like a DIY cloudflare.
I also run Uptime Kuma on the VPS, since it will continue to work if my local network is down.
The ban isn’t preventing students from bringing a cell phone and keeping it turned off in their lockers all day.
As an aside, hello fellow Montrealer.
Right? I survived just fine withiut a cell phone until partway through high school. If there was an emergency, my parents would just call the school.
Yeah, that’s what I was afraid of. Understandable though, since horizontal scaling/HA usually isn’t a priority when developing a new application.
I’m not too familiar with Lemmy’s codebase, but I am a devops engineer. Is the software written in any way to support horizontal scaling? If so, I’d be happy to consult/help to get the instance onto an autoscaling platform eventually.
I feel like the only people who actually care are the type who wrap their entire personality around which OS they use