Impressive! Can you please link the instructions you followed?
Some time ago I was hosting the full ARR suite, bitwarden, AdGuard etc, but it was usually a mess with direct installs. With docker it might be worth revisiting it.
My only advice, buy a usb-ETH dongle, it will make a huge difference in stability
I'm using a selfhosted pastebin (microbin) as sometimes I want to transfer text, other files...
It's very efficient and in my instance it's using 13MB of RAM, which is fairly lightweight for modern standards
Thanks to everyone that has replied, all fair points.
When you use (read, view, listen to...) copyrighted material you're subject to the licensing rules, no matter if it's free (as in beer) or not.
This means that quoting more than what's considered fair use is a violation of the license, for instance.
In practice a human would not be able to quote exactly a 1000 words document just on the first read but "AI" can, thus infringing one of the licensing clauses.
Some licensing on copyrighted material is also explicitly forbidding to use the full content by automated systems (once they were web crawlers for search engines)
Basically all these possibilities or actual licensing infringements would require a negotiation between the involved parties.
This process is akin to how humans learn by reading widely and absorbing styles and techniques, rather than memorizing and reproducing exact passages.
Many people quote this part saying that this is not the case and this is the main reason why the argument is not valid.
Let's take a step back and not put in discussion how current "AI" learns vs how human learn.
The key point for me here is that humans DO PAY (or at least are expected to...) to use and learn from copyrighted material. So if we're equating "AI" method of learning with humans', both should be subject to the the same rules and regulations.
Meaning that "AI" should pay for using copyrighted material.
That's because linuxserver focuses on creating docker images for existing projects.
Usually if you check a product on linuxserver.io is because you know already the product and you want to find a good quality docker (docker compose) image.
All the github and docker pages from linuxserver have the same structure and after the generic intro they present the project.
Personally I love what they're doing but I understand your confusion, it was the same for me when I first knew of the project.
For what I understood the decryption/encryption process happens on the bridge.
The bridge is the selfhosted component so the transformation would happen in your server and they would have no visibility over the unencrypted message.
HaikuOS, simply FANTASTIC!
Out of curiosity are you using it as a daily driver?
I've tried early beta (2010 or so) and it was super fast but not enough to use it every day...
The Expendables 4 is out? You made my day, really need to watch it!
I enjoyed all of the three in the series, light humor, action, all my old heroes.... couldn't ask for more.
Give me some time to watch it before calling the cops to pick me up :D
Thanks, makes much more sense.
Too bad that some great titles lost just because they were not so popular.
To be fairer Steam should add some rules like: of you didn't play the game, you cannot vote it...
I found Xenoblade absolutely impressive under all aspects.
Zelda is fantastic, FF EX, Dragonquest... all with their distinctive art style and mechanics
But what really stuns me are the emulation capabilities. You can play all Nintendo portable games at ease + a ton of home console of the '90s and before and all in your pocket
Yes, I've tried already that option (code server) and unfortunately I cannot use the "Remote" / "Dev Containers" extension with it. If you know how to do that, please let me know.
I'm one or those as well, but instead of VLC I use NOVA player on Android devices because of the remote sync.
Said that I'm using WebDAV shares as SMB is way slower. Is it just me? Any other protocol suggestion?