That would require a comma after “take it”
That would require a comma after “take it”
Documentation has been mentioned already, what I’d add to that is planning.
Start with a list of high-level objectives, as in “Need a way to save notes, ideas, documents, between multiple systems, including mobile devices”.
Then break that down to high-level requirements such as “Implement Joplin, and a sync solution”.
Those high-level requirements then spawn system requirements, such as Joplin needs X disk space, user accounts, etc.
Each of those branches out to technical requirements, which are single-line, single-task descriptions (you can skip this, it’s a nice-to-have):
“Create folder Joplin on server A”
“Set folder permissions XYZ on Joplin folder”
Think of it all as a tree, starting from your objectives. If you document it like this first, you won’t go doing something as you build that you won’t remember why you’re doing it, or make decisions on the fly that conflict with other objectives.
Yep.
I have friends in the SMB space, one thing they do is a regular backup verification (quarterly). At that frequency, restoring even a few files (especially to a new VM), is very indicative, especially if it’s a large dataset (e.g. Quickbooks).
In Enterprise, we do all sorts of validation, depending on the system. Some is performed as part of Data Center operations, some is by IT (those are separate things), some by Business Unit management and their IT counterparts.
Performance may be an issue. It’s not specifically designed for streaming performance, and being a software VPN, it will depend a great deal on the devices used at each end.
Great summary!
Why Debian or Ubuntu? (I have my own thoughts, but it would be useful to show even high-level reasons why they’re preferred).
Re: Backup - Backblaze has a great writeup on backup approach today. I’m a fan of cloud being part of the mix (I use a combo of local replication and cloud, to mitigate different risks). Getting people to include backup from the start will help them long-term, so great you included it!
Certainly not this guy!
It’s up to the squatter to actually spend the time and money to sue though.
A C&D is a letter from a lawyer to stop or they’ll sue, it’s not a court order.
Hahahahaha, damn Google.
“Help us prevent government from stopping us from being bad actors”.
Yea, if you use Tailscale with Funnel, you get a secure connection with no config required by the web user.
Not seeing why you need WordPress.
The safest way I can see to make a secure connection across an untrusted network is to use a VPN of some sort, specifically a mesh network like Wireguard or Tailscale.
Tailscale has the advantage of being almost zero config, plus has the Serve and Funnel features which provide a mechanism to allow specific traffic into your Tailscale network.
Edit: Tailscale Serve is probably what I’d use.
I think seven was answering the question
To tack on to this, with an example that is easier to grasp - I have my own cloud, comprised of machines at my house, my friends, and family.
Those machines provide backup storage for each other, over the internet (using an encrypted connection).
If I were to charge people for storage, I’d be little different than any other cloud storage provider (at the most basic level).
Your second point is why paying for such services makes a real difference.
Companies like storj.io, backblaze, or any other cloud storage/backup provider provide a service for a fee with (not really) clear usage rules. If you’re encrypting your stuff before it goes to the cloud, you’re pretty safe from scanning, and if you have a contract for a given space and bandwidth, the worst you’ll probably run into is overage fees.
“No longer”?
You just now realize this?
If this is a new behaviour, I’d talk to a vet to make sure there are no health issues.
If there are no new health issues, and he never did this before, then you’ve inadvertently trained him to this new behavior (probably by going out whenever). It happens easily, because we don’t realize we’re establishing a new routine.
Talk to your vet, besides the health angle, they probably have advice on undoing the behaviour.
After (ugh) 30 years of having PCs and many, many, drives, Seagate has been the worst.
But I’ve had WD fail too. Just not as much, and I’ve had far more WD drives. I currently have about 20 drives of varying ages, 98% of them are WD, because more of the Seagate drives have failed and been trashed.
And backup, proper backup.
Season it with Flax seed oil. Worth the $10 for the bottle, and time.
Cooks Country came up with Flax seed oil after a lot of testing.
http://www.cooksillustrated.com/how...d=26897&frtk=u3VJqn8v17q3E4m0demcX4pjog35T4sL
My only issue with Grayjay (both Android and Windows app), is you have to manually export the videos out of Grayjay
If you try to grab the files directly, they don’t work.
Exactly!