

From what I recall, it is buried behind multiple clicks - click in to the transaction, click in to another section, perform the operations you want, go back to the transaction list, etc
From what I recall, it is buried behind multiple clicks - click in to the transaction, click in to another section, perform the operations you want, go back to the transaction list, etc
I tried out a whole bunch of these recently, and think I will be landing on Actual Budget due to the ease of use.
Maybe is the slickest looking, but it is on of the most cumbersome in terms of tagging/categorizing transactions.
I tried:
Do you mean Empress?
btrbk
handles to automated generation of snapshots, as well as sending/receiving to another drive for backup. What this workflow accomplish that btrbk
doesn’t do on its own? Compression?
Sounds like your would benefit from using dockcheck.sh for your use case.
Dockcheck is the way to go
Sounds like you need to talk with @retro@infosec.pub from elsewhere in this comment section.
As someone who now only games from the Steam deck, every time this gets posted I immediately look for updates as to whether a Linux or web client is included.
Until then, I’ll keep going with my current set up.
What is DoH?
I use a Radxa Rock 5B running an Android TV ROM. Sits in a 3D printed case and has a silent little Noctua fan keeping it cool. Could be better - the ROM has a little jank to it - but it has taken everything I’ve thrown at it so far.
I use a Radxa Rock 5B running an Android TV ROM. Sits in a 3D printed case and has a silent little Noctua fan keeping it cool. Could be better - the ROM has a little jank to it - but it has taken everything I’ve thrown at it so far.
Looks very nice. Also looks very pricey.
Oh man. Of all the self-hosted projects to not grasp, you picked the darling.
The creator of Immich had the same use case that got me in to self hosting:
At the core - Immich allows me a continuity of service and saves money while keeping spousal approval at the required levels.
I’m getting this set up at my parents’. Just gotta remind them not to touch the box!
If it crosses your mind once it’s all hooked up :-)
Thanks for the reply! I have a couple USB 3.0 2-drive docks that just sit out in the open - consolidating in to a single, enclosed unit with a fan would be nice (since mine or open, you really hear the HD spin up/click when accessing it).
What do you use to adjust your drives’ spin down? hdparm? hd-idle? I have one drive that is constantly spinning/accessed so the thermal concerns with the unit do weigh on me.
Reviews on that page are kind of dodgy, but they are for all 3 products listed which makes it difficult to tell which review is for what.
Have you had any of the listed issues? Heat, unrecognized success, etc?
Yeah I’m really curious where the difficulty lies. Nextcloud was one of the earliest, if not the first, services that I deployed on a server when learning about Linux/Docker from scratch. The evolution of my setup has mostly been through my better understanding of container management practices than through anything Nextcloud specific.
My only Nextcloud specific issue has to do with the implementation of a reverse proxy (NPM) breaking the ability for my Nextcloud and OnlyOffice containers ability to connect - and I’ve not been so fixed about it that I haven’t really sat down trying to figure a fix.
What is a Spot?