YouTube takes 30% from channel memberships, whereas Odysee takes 5%
Fuck these greedy bastards at Google
YouTube takes 30% from channel memberships, whereas Odysee takes 5%
Fuck these greedy bastards at Google
Virtual Machine Manager is a great GUI frontend for KVM/libvirt and QEMU, and basically the gold standard for VM management on Linux
Shouldn't it technically be possible to set this up with bitmagnet? Does anyone have experience with that?
I recommend using i2pd, a more performant and stable version, rewritten in C++, instead of the normal I2P client, which is written in Java and can sometimes have performance issues.
You can play Stardew Valley in multiplayer co-op mode, it's also quite cheap at $14, it's available on every platform and even has excellent Linux support
+1 for MikroTik, they're based in the EU (Riga, Latvia to be precise) and have a really good reputation. And they're really cheap, while offering many features that can otherwise only be found on Cisco enterprise equipment.
The ones that you build yourself and load with free & open source software. Basically any x86 PC or even ARM SBCs like the Raspberry Pi can work as a router, as long as you have 2 separate network interfaces. There are quite a few FOSS router/firewall operating systems like dd-wrt, OpenWRT, pfSense and OPNSense. If you don't want to do this yourself, there are companies like Protectli that offer dedicated pre-built hardware that's ensured to be compatible with pfSense/OPNSense and comes Coreboot pre-installed.
Sure, that's another option, but I would have bought a projector anyway, and the fact that they haven't been hit by enshittification is a nice bonus on top
I have a local instance of Vaultwarden that I use to generate and store the credentials for my local services, and I use normal cloud-hosted Bitwarden for all my other passwords.
Don't trust any proprietary software for things as sensitive as your Router. Use OpenWRT, dd-wrt, pfSense, OPNSense, whatever. Just make sure that it's FOSS.
Arch now also has a convenient install script, that does all the heavy lifting. It's an easy-to-use terminal interface, and basically works like any other OS installer.