I was going to recommend Logseq as well. I use the git plug-in on laptops and Working Copy (git on iOS) and some automations to sync it on mobile.
I was going to recommend Logseq as well. I use the git plug-in on laptops and Working Copy (git on iOS) and some automations to sync it on mobile.
What do your logs say?
Similar to how there are Mastodon hosting providers, I imagine Lemmy providers will eventually appear to make being your own admin even simpler.
I also have around 3GB used for pictrs
and I’m not really sure the best way to see what all content is in there.
I’m about to do the same thing. Thanks for sharing your experience.
This is correct. Other servers will not connect with you if you don’t have a valid certificate.
You do need valid TLS and a cert can’t be directly issued on an IP.
The instance settings now includes a private instance option, which if turned on, will only let logged in users view your site. Private instances was one of our first issues, and it was a large effort, so its great to finally have this completed.
From the release notes.
I haven’t tried it but I think that making an instance private disables federation.
Advanced data protection is across your entire account, not per device. According to Apple’s documentation they rotate the keys locally on your devices and then delete them from their services so they no longer have a key to give.
I find debuggers are used a lot more on confusing legacy code.
Lately, monitoring tools such as OpenTelemetry have replaced a lot of my use of profilers.
I’d use some sort of generative “find on page” or “summarize page” where I could have a quick Q/A without needing to read a long article.
If you aren’t attached to Ansible, I suggest using Docker to host Lemmy. I found it’s instructions, using Docker Compose, to be quite straight forward.
My other 2 cents is that hosting on Windows isn’t worth the hassle and there will be a lot less to debug on Ubuntu if you’re already comfortable with it.
+1 to using a subdomain. You’ll probably have a much better time even if you get a path working.
I’ve been trying to debug this as well so it’s not just you.
Thanks! I’ve been looking for this.
I started with my self-hosted Mastodon instance but quickly realized that just added noise. Self-hosting Lemmy was pretty simple and now I run both.
The resource needs for a small Lemmy instance are quite low and practically nothing compared to my Mastodon instance.
It’s not the cheapest but I use a DigitalOcean instance to do what you are describing. I’ve been burned by VPS hosts and I’ve enjoyed the complete lack of drama or downtime with DigitalOcean.
For port forwarding I’m using Private Internet Access and gluetun. I don’t really recommend Private Internet Access and, like you, I’m interested in a better solution. It’d be nice if I could use ProtonVPN’s port forwarding but it looks like that only works if you use their app.
I run my own FreshRSS and it’s been a great experience.
I second this. I used to use Raspberry Pis but one mini PC can do so much more and isn’t much more expensive.
Sounds like you need some more hobbies to throw at it. :-)
You could always inflate the numbers by giving it artificial load but I imagine that breaks a ToS somewhere.