I’m using a M720q with an Intel i5-8400T for the same purpose and I’m happy with it.
I’ve abandoned Contabo a couple of months ago and I’ve never been happier! One of the worst customer service ever and the resources that they specify in the plans don’t seems real to me.
On another note, I received some flack last week for poking fun at the Immich devs for prioritizing the platform’s new mascot over a feature I’ve personally been looking forward to (yes, they were in on it). I had planned to make a formal apology this week until I noticed they dropped another release that again left me feeling neglected as they instead celebrated 60k GitHub stars (is that a lot?).
If you need me before next Friday, I’ll be busy making the transition back to Google Photos while enjoying this custom CSS for styling a Flame dashboard to look like the Lumon MDR terminals from Severance
Both these sentence feels very childish to me.
First of all, it’s an open source software, nobody can pretend anything!
Second, it’s clear that, as mentioned by one of the developer, they were joking about it
If he was joking too, I didn’t get it.
I use Alps bigger peaks for the hosts like:
(yes, mainly from Monte Rosa) and smaller peaks for the VMs:
The price rboem problem is that the log file is inside the container in the www folder.
Edit: typo
I use SMTP2GO (with my own domain) with the free plan (1000 email per month) that’s way over a selfhoster needs.
I’ve read the article and I couldn’t see any implication of Seagate. I’m not saying anything about your story, shame on Seagate, but I don’t see what that has to do with the scandal in the article.
ChatGPT summary:
The podcast episode “Byebye Raspberry Pi” discusses the evolving role of Raspberry Pi devices in 2025. The host evaluates self-hosting options, the growing appeal of thin clients over Raspberry Pi due to cost and performance, and the use of containers for flexible testing environments. They also touch on repurposing older hardware and share personal experiences with self-hosting and audio editing. The episode covers modern alternatives to Raspberry Pi, such as x86 computers, and invites audience feedback on their use of devices for hosting services. The discussion includes tips on managing disk space and remote access with WireGuard.
Oh, I really didn’t know that. Thanks
No no, what I meant is that if I connect to your server without the certificate installed don’t I just get the warning and I can still get through?
Beside the fact that you would like to understand if you’ve done everything properly (that’s good, but I can’t help you here), a VPN on a smartphone can be always active. Mine is always on and I’ve never noticed any battery problem. If you prefer something simpler there’s Tailscale.
I don’t know much about certificates, but doesn’t that just alert the browser that the certificate is not trusted and you can decide if keep going or not?
I’ve never virtualized OpenWRT, but with hardware passthrough I don’t see why it shouldn’t work.
Question: why don’t you crate your own Grafana dashboard? Do you have too many servers?
I second your opinion about not selfhosting Bitwarden. About email, have a look at Proton mail. All the emails are encrypted in the server and are decripted client side with your password only when you open them.
Why Tailscale AND Headscale? Arent’t they the same thing?