The nostalgia is strong in this one, I love these discoveries.
The nostalgia is strong in this one, I love these discoveries.
Sweet, maybe I can roll back all the way to windows XP now /s
I have no idea, I guess we have to wait for an initial release.
The dev took it down, I’m not going to go into his reasons to do so, but you can find a fork here.
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I used to use ansible and helm, but it is overkill for my case. Today I basically use a combo of markdown and bash scripts, the combination of them allows me to run the scripts straight from my IDE.
Really good writeup of a very interesting exploit.
I had the same idea a couple years back and even though I would love something that you download and just run and it would work, I realized that in order to get a decent adoption rate, you would need a whole ecosystem, similar to apple in order for it to work.
I still think you can develop something like a hub where you install services like apps, but I doubt it would attract anyone outside selfhosting circles.
This is how I see God, pretty sure it applies to seeding as well.
There are several things you can and should do to harden your server, many of them can be found here.
My os is running with a slightly modified us qwerty, which then is mapped through keyboard firmware to a modified us dvorak.
Ah just read the post title. Thanks for the correction!
l wouldn’t call half of these java frameworks
Not to piss on anyones parade here, but grepping something out of a json structure is one of the most asked questions for jq as well. Of course json is nice, but if the goal is to simplify data extraction, I’m not sure much will be gained by this.
As far as reducing the toolchain necessary to extract the same data, this is a welcome addition.
Would it not be possible to block this using firewall rules?
When you buy something you should have the right to repair it and modify it.
Currently, everything is basically a renters agreement, where you pay for something you have zero rights to modify or opt out of.
There’s no such thing as US specific on the Internet. Every law made concerning online presence anywhere will have at least a limited impact on the Internet as a whole.
You could look into apps like authelia, keycloak, authentic, etc.
I run my self hosted stuff on a k3s cluster at home on bare metal, then use cloudflare to protect the IP and access only by VPN.
Nice post, thanks for sharing!