

Depends on the currency and features. If you’re looking for something outside of the 14 eyes that allows port forwarding, your options are extremely limited.


Depends on the currency and features. If you’re looking for something outside of the 14 eyes that allows port forwarding, your options are extremely limited.
Any momentum on this front gets me excited, even if it doesn’t personally apply.
Since it’s cost-effective to combine gaming requirements with AI server requirements, I have my multi-modal language model stuff running on my (admittedly seldom-used) Windows gaming desktop. That means running most GPU-related tasks (aside from encoding/decoding/simple object recognition, which uses a separate server containing an Arc A380… purchased before A310’s were available) in docker running under Windows Subsystem for Linux 2 (WSL2). Running stuff as background services just makes one assume that it should be a logical step to just make it multi-user. Easier said than done, I guess, just like multi-user stable diffusion.
Getting Games on Whales running under WSL2 has taken me down the familiar but unwelcome rabbit hole of recompiling Linux Kernel modules, which I’ve experienced is more straightforward on bare metal than WSL2.
The more attention and excitement about this topic, the better.


No more listing dozens of sensors when I ask what the temperature is outside, perhaps?
Funny, every time someone mentions pi-hole, I have to look up why I don’t use it, and I wonder if others do the same.
My combination of pfSense and its pfBlockerNG package does pretty much same thing and more, and once I migrate to opnSense, I have high expectations I should be able to do something similar.


That’s exactly how I searched. If you want security, it’s probably best to follow the Unix philosophy of do one thing and do it well. In other words, don’t trust someone building a media server to handle auth and instead use the OIDC or LDAP plugins.


Basic auth? The insecure authentication method?
Ok, I’ll look it up anyway. Under the jellyfin repository, there were eight results, none of which seemed to describe what you meant, and under the jellyfin-web repository, there were none. Using a web crawler search, I was able to find Issue #123 for jellyfin-android
Is that it?


You’ve piqued my interest. Where can I read about it?
I did a quick search on their github and came up empty. Maybe no one mentioned “htaccess” in the issue.
I dunno, mailcow dockerized seems to work ok for me. That being said, e-mail is so 20th century.