Okay, that makes much more sense.
Okay, that makes much more sense.
Wait, is it required to mirror the entire Bluesky history? Can’t you just store only new messages? Because the storage requirements (4.5TB according to the article) make it almost impossible to self-host.
Oh no, but it’s a neat feature, I wish Mastodon had it!
I’m not sure what you mean. There is a list feature much like the one that existed on Twitter, but since I don’t use it, I don’t know if you can share lists.
Edit: I tried the List feature and it does not work like on Twitter (at least the way I remember it): it only can only contain users you already follow and is private. It acts more like a feed with only a subset of your follows.
BTW, the author of this article still advertises its Twitter account 🙃
Inb4 The Guardian will have a presence on Bluesky but not the Fediverse 🙃
TIL that Schneider Electric is a French company. I always assumed it was American or Swiss.
I have been contemplating moving to SearNXG for a few weeks, but I have a hard time finding whether I can configure things like domain down-ranking/blocking or custom bangs and lenses, does anyone know if you can do that on a user or instance-level?
I still don’t get why Strava activities are public by default and why they do not make their users aware of it. I remember having to rummage through the settings to make activities private by default.
If you want an experience similar to Arc without the AI nonsense, there is Zen Browser, a Firefox fork with vertical tabs, profiles and side panel.
I’m not familiar with Nextcloud, but from reading the How to use this? section of the README I believe you can run it behind a reverse proxy:
--publish 80:80
This means that port 80 of the container should get published on the host using port 80. It is used for getting valid certificates for the AIO interface if you want to use port 8443. It is not needed if you run AIO behind a web server or reverse proxy and can get removed in that case as you can simply use port 8080 for the AIO interface then.
(Emphasis mine, in “Explanation of the command”)
My understanding is you only have to forward traffic from the reverse proxy to the port 8080. It uses a self-signed certificate though, so you might check if the reverse proxy you are using checks certificates signatures for upstream servers.
It is possible, what you’re looking for is a reverse proxy: it’s an HTTP server that will listen to the standard ports for HTTP and HTTPS that will redirect traffic to the chosen service based on the domain name or URL.
In your case, every subdomain would point to your VPS’s IP and traffic that’s for mastodon.example.tld
will be seemlesly proxied to your Mastodon container.
Do some research on Caddy or Nginx, and I strongly recommend you learn Docker Compose and Docker networking, it will help you make it easier to maintain everything.
PS: CNAME pointing to A record is the way to go. You can do it one better by having a CNAME entry for *.example.tld
, so that you don’t have to create a CNAME entry for every new service you deploy, but you better make sure that your reverse proxy won’t proxy requests to an unexpected container when requesting a bogus subdomain.
Parents, maybe? They are usually so concerned about children’s safety, whether that’s their kids or someone else’s.
I already did back when Microsoft announced they would drop WMR, but it was (and still is) pretty experimental, with no controller support and 6DoF requiring external tracking.
to keep Copilot off your desktop or learn Linux
For me it’s one year to keep Windows Mixed Reality working. I’m still miffed that they pulled the plug with no alternative other than putting my headset in the bin and get a new one…
Don’t want to wait? Get Firefox
Also it doesn’t respect robots.txt
(the file that tells bots whether or not a given page can be accessed) unlike most AI scrapping bots.
Unfortunately you can’t follow users on Lemmy. On Kbin, Mastodon and others, you can follow Bluesky users through Bridgy Fed but they must opt-in first by following @ap.brid.gy (which very few people do)