I want to host their web application as well and have tried to figure out a way to write a Dockerfile and Docker Compose file for it, but I must face it: I am utterly incompetent.
Perhaps we should open an issue in the repository asking for this.
Thank you for this very valuable feedback on this tutorial. I will address this when I have some spare time again, knowing that what takes most of my time writing this up is translating and error-proofing into English, as well as Markdown formatting for readability. 😅
On a side note, all components are mandatory to get the server to work in my write-up, apart from Monograph, which is only included to allow users to share notes publicly.
As for the adaptability of my process, I am genuinely hoping that developers will use this foundational work to create their own long-overdue self-hosting documentation and guide others more efficiently on how to build their own setups.
Peertube is awesome but is way overkill for my needs indeed, and their docker install is not as easy as clipbucket. Also, I don't need federation. The choice was easy :)
I was following this project for a little while and it's amazing the progress you've done so far.
I'm using a proprietary solution at the moment, and I hate giving them my credentials. Also, the platform is not really reliable (it's Postly, for anyone interested).
I have my posts scheduled for the next couple months there, so it might give me time to have another look at the actual state of Postiz, and see if my small knowledge will be enough to deploy it on docker.
Any plans on adding support to pixelfed anytime soon ?
I didn't really care about the subreddit even before the API shitshow, as I find the place filled with toxic, elitist gatekeepers.
As I was just starting to self-host and was merely a modest hobbyist, I only encountered hate and downvotes there.
In short, I don't miss that place.
That said, I find the community here much more helpful and positive. It could use a bit more engagement, and we should all post and share more—myself included. But overall, I like it.
/r/selfhosted remains just an entry in my RSS feed to ensure I don't miss anything of interest; mostly, I just read post titles.
You don't even know the business I'm running and who my target audience is :D
If I can touch more people with the mentality to use fediverse, then, good for me ;)
That's great reading something else than "use a work computer".
Actually, this is the root of my problem, I don't really seek clients that are people using tiktok. My target customer doesn't use any of this crap, but before I can count on word of mouth, I need to eat, and I'll make some profit when I've finally met my target customers.
I know of these:
https://github.com/bitnami/containers/tree/main/bitnami/
https://github.com/docker/awesome-compose
They're not specific to projects listed in the awesome-selfhosted list though.