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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)FF
Posts
12
Comments
311
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • This is my wireguard docker setup:

     
        
    version: "3.6"
    services:
      wireguard:
        image: linuxserver/wireguard
        container_name: wireguard
        cap_add:
          - NET_ADMIN
          - SYS_MODULE
        environment:
          - PUID=116
          - PGID=122
          - TZ=Europe/Stockholm
          - ALLOWEDIPS=192.168.1.0/24
        volumes:
          - /data/torrent/wireguard/config:/config
          - /lib/modules:/lib/modules
        ports:
          - 192.168.1.111:8122:8122  # Deluge webui
          - 192.168.1.111:9127:9127  # jackett webui
          - 192.168.1.111:9666:9666  # prowlarr webui
          - 51820:51820/udp           # wireguard
          - 192.168.1.111:58426:58426  # Deluge RPC
        sysctls:
          - net.ipv4.conf.all.src_valid_mark=1
          - net.ipv6.conf.all.disable_ipv6=1
          - net.ipv6.conf.default.disable_ipv6=1
        restart: unless-stopped
    
      

    Can reach the webuis from LAN, no other network configuration was necessary. 192.168.1.111 is the server's LAN address. The other services are configured very similar to your qbittorrent, and don't expose any ports. Can't promise it's 100% correct but it's working for me.

  • Hope you decided to buy neither of the two in the end, since Flashforge is also known for being anti-consumer and their shady business practices. Out of the two I'd actually go with Bambu Lab if I didn't care about openness and modding, since their printers at least seem to have fairly good quality.

  • I admit this is speculation, but I got the impression that Prusa is moving away from open source because they're salty about other companies cloning their products and selling them much cheaper than the "original" parts. Proprietary parts, patents, etc. is of course worse for the user than a fully open ecosystem, but he isn't necessarily going full anti-consumer.

  • You have to specify which quantization you find acceptable, and which context size you require. I think the most affordable option to run large models locally is still getting multiple RTX3090 cards, and I guess you probably need 3 or 4 of those depending on quantization and context.

  • My paranoia level: Even though I'm pretty good with computers in general, I would not trust myself to set up a safe public facing service, which is the reason that I don't have any of those on my home server. If I needed something like that I wouldn't self host it.

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • The question is probably more related to what he has done rather than what he is doing right now, and he is kind of famous for having created Linux in the past. To someone who doesn't know anything about Linux licenses I think it would be easy to suspect that Torvalds might have some kind of ownership of his creation.

  • The "meh key" simulates pressing ctrl+alt+shift at the same time. Can't find any particular keyboard having it first, could have been added to QMK and then people who wanted it just added it to their layouts.

  • Sad thing is that search engines have got so bad, and usually return so much garbage blog spam that searching directly on reddit is more likely to give useful results. I hope a similar amount of knowledge will build up on Lemmy over time.

  • I think Microsoft and their partners have been dreaming about turning PCs into fully locked down platforms for a long time, completely unrelated to gaming. Hardware DRM including display devices and cables, and only running "trusted" software is the end goal.

  • I think the problem is that game publishers also want the cheapest and laziest solutions. What EA (and others) are doing now are basically "give us full control of your computer so we can do whatever we want" with their kernel level anti-cheats. Server side anti-cheat requires more processing that they have to pay for, and requires more work to develop heuristics and other algorithms to detect cheaters.

  • Would be interesting to know why some people downvoted this comment, if they think there's some reason to not play The Finals on Linux. I've only done the tutorial so far, and the gameplay seems somewhat similar to Apex, it's also f2p, and uses EAC so currently no issues with anti-cheat. Might not look like an indie game but it feels like a decent alternative to Apex.