

Google decided we need to be fed more algorithm crap instead of actually useful (i.e. most recent) results.
Somewhere between Linux woes, gaming, open source, 3D printing, recreational coding, and occasional ranting.
🇬🇧 / 🇩🇪


Google decided we need to be fed more algorithm crap instead of actually useful (i.e. most recent) results.


Oh, cool. I have both installed for different reasons and discovered it by accident.


My largest issue right now is that you cannot order search results by date anymore.


You can give mpv an URL from YouTube and it will play that video.


Exactly! Your user data is stored in c:\users. This includes, well, your user data for all of the users, including all user-spefific configuration files and application data and actual files and directories created by the user.
Unfortunately lots of configuration is stored in the registry and is useless for transitioning them over to Linux. Same with most Windows software that doesn’t use the registry. You’ll unfortunately also find configuration files all.over the place. Might it be in the application’s installation directory c:\ProgramData, or somewhere else.


Malicious compliance is the best form of compliance.
Sounds like you have an awesome dad!
how is a 36-year-old supposed to act?
How ever they want!


selfhost.eu offers dynamic DNS which works perfectly fine with my router, using their API access as documented by them. It also works perfectly well with Let’s Encrypt integrated in Nginx Proxy Manager.
They’re in the market since 2001, I use them since ca. 2010 and never had any issues. Their website looks ancient, almost historic. But it’s functional.


This sounds like a fun project that needs some customization, like styling and templating everything to make it look like a blog with federation and comments and not like a Lemmy instance.
Edit: You could also setup GoToSocial for example and set maximum character size to 5000 or so.
This will give you a place to blog and get comments. Readers need a front-end and for them it just looks like a Mastodon account, but you could use styling and template magic to convert the back-end into a nice looking blog front-end.
It’s easy to setup, host, and maintain and runs on fairly low resources.
Can’t say anything about Piefed, but from what I tried quite some time ago, Lemmy is absurdly annoying to properly set up in an already existing Docker environment with an already existing reverse proxy, because it wants to basically handle everything on it’s own.
It might be actually easier to use another machine or a VM and install Docker there and let Lemmy do whatever it wants to do und just proxy from your main setup to the Lemmy setup.
I gave up.