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Right? I don’t think anyone ever even told me that was the origin, it just sort of made sense intuitively.
Right? I don’t think anyone ever even told me that was the origin, it just sort of made sense intuitively.
I host a handful of Internet facing sites/applications from my NAS and have had no issues. Just make sure you know how to configure your firewall correctly and you’ll be fine.
I’m sure Rep. Mike Johnson and his son are thrilled.
There’s another nifty little container called qbittorrent-natmap that will take care of that for you.
Explains the knee and back pain.
Got a response from Proton. Main post edited.
Got a response from Proton. Main post edited.
I’m accessing them through IP and port number. All of my *arrs are hosted in docker containers running on my Synology NAS.
Oh, piss off.
I saw a video once that said, for the size of the Enterprise ships, the onboard populations are actually really small. Presumably the various departments and quarters are distributed throughout the ship and it’s just very sparsely populated. Doesn’t make much logistic sense to me, but if they had everyone centrally located with the usual crew size, much of the ship would have been empty.
Edit: video
I recently converted to Linux and am loving the FOSS environment. Together with my NAS which covers my “cloud storage” and media server needs, I’m having an awesome time not having to give away money and/or my information just to use my own hardware.
You need a hug or somethin', sweetheart?
Considering the Fediverse is new territory, legally speaking, I can sympathize with a bit of extra caution from instance hosts who don’t have a team of lawyers backing them up.
I see what you mean. I have Google Fiber, they do not use CG-NAT.
I use a Dynamic DNS service to keep that updated. When I last tested the issue, it was showing the correct public IP in Plex’s settings.
Good to know it’s not OS specific, at least. My server is on my Synology NAS.
My Plex server is hosted on my Synology NAS, and my router has the correct port forwarding rules to route the Plex traffic where it needs to go. Since remote access still works, it doesn’t seem to be an issue with the port forwarding, but rather an issue with Plex itself and whatever method it uses to check remote connectivity.
Other sources were already posted in the comments showing that “redneck” referring to farmers predates its usage to refer to coal miners/communists. Definitely agree there’s a lot of stuff conveniently left out of our history books, though.