

I don’t believe for a second his family is holding the bag.


I don’t believe for a second his family is holding the bag.


Hard SPF and DKIM enforcement helps.


I just learned about this yesterday. Haven’t found out if my previous backup solution also has become encrypted. The cloud backup, I understand. But… I don’t have much going on there that’s sensitive. Family locations? I guess…
I’ve pushed the limits of the SAF a few times.
Noting that I could buy a new NAS every year with what we save on not Netflix is helpful occasionally.
It’s cheaper to build a new server. Cloud… just isn’t cheap. Makes sense for accounting purposes and business reliability standards to a degree but not much for home use.
This happened to me:
Now my whole family relies on this underpowered house of cards.
“Good” software based RAID (unraid, zfs, etc.) needs reliable access directly to the drives. Usually, USB attached storage doesn’t meet this criteria.
Not using RAID is risky unless you’re very confident in your extensive backups (which you should have anyways).
Personally I have been using a mini PC running TrueNAS with a JBOD over USB3.1 for years and have had some hiccups but nothing catastrophic, but I’m migrating it soon to a device I can use SATA.
Hardware raid is typically not a great idea because you’re usually tied to the chip.


More like “What the Irish government did (to drive the economy forward without thinking about long term impacts to services and reliance on robber barons)”
They created a tax haven which created some jobs but doesn’t really capture on the value creation.
Cloudflare is a business service primarily and the people who should be worried about its monopoly are the businesses, not so much a handful of people running home servers.
Self-hosting an authoritative dns server is not a good idea for several reasons.
Cloudflare doesn’t have access to data hosted in your server unless you’re using their reverse proxy tunnel.
A momentary (if severe) blip in their availability isn’t a good reason to change providers.


It is very infrequent that I find myself needing a form of entertainment. Generally, when I am unable to find it on the high seas, it is entirely unobtainable through legal channels.
It is far more frequent that I find myself purchasing a thing I have previously pirated.


But there’s no real reason for that. Losing the smarts. OSS just artificial to achieve lower bom.


If it doesn’t work when the cloud is down, it’s not your thing. Don’t buy it. 8sleep is only the most recent example.


Well, Chinese manufactures cloned the design and came in well under price, took the Chinese market, then improved the product and challenged iRobot globally.
Embrace, extend, extinguish.


I expose homeasssistant via nginx. I run snort and I can assure you I am constantly getting hits. I haven’t tuned it much, so I’m sure there’s false positives in there but I’m equally sure there’s false negatives.
If you can’t figure out how to set up docker, set up a reverse proxy, check and configure TLS, you definitely aren’t ready for self hosting. It’s a highly technical exercise and one bad move will make your Internet connection part of a botnet. (Arguably, you don’t even need to be self hosting for that, but there’s no point in making it easy).
I believe it’s never been easier to set up a home server. I set up Tailscale in between sips of coffee one day and my mind (as an almost-grizzled sysadmin) was blown. My non technical family members can set up a VPN in 10 minutes. It’s a terrible security practice, but there’s pipe-to-bash scripts everywhere now that get things set up and running in minutes. You want Homeassistant container on proxmox? Burn the proxmox image to a usb, boot and install, then run this command. Boom. Homeassistant in a container. Let’s do pihole - another script and we’re done.
It’s ludicrously easy to get going compared to even 10 years ago.
Yes, when you want to change a setting, or configure it for local use, it’s more complicated. But that’s the way it’s always been, and that’s how I learn - follow the cookbook, and then realize you need to change this piece, which requires understanding that piece, and there you go.
Hm I may give that a try just to try something different. But I do have a mx Ergo so it’s not as accessible as yours.
You use the pointer between the keyboard? Doesn’t that cause trouble with the shoulders? I sprawl wide with my key board and wider with my trackball.


Running this all on one system presents a single point of failure. Separate the router from the server, even if simply for sanity.


Well look at you reading TFA! (☞゚ヮ゚)☞
That’s why the source is locked down. It’s a copyright grey area and IANAL but - good luck!


Definitely very cool.
It is odd that they went to a “different” cloud instead of making it full local. It seems like that would be more work. Local control of iot is critical.
But I wonder if they dumped the firmware, edited the URLs, and reverse engineered the google API, and made their own.
3 months later “who wrote this? wtf does this mean? What is the password?”