[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 5 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

May not add security in and of itself, but it certainly adds the ability to have a little extra security. Put your reverse proxy in a DMZ, so that only it is directly facing the intergoogles. Use firewall to only expose certain ports and destinations exposed to your origins. Install a single wildcard cert and easily cover any subdomains you set up. There's even nginx configuration files out there that will block URL's based on regex pattern matches for suspicious strings. All of this (probably a lot more I'm missing) adds some level of layered security.

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 11 points 5 months ago

I definitely would lean into your camp for sure. The demo video shows it previewing suggested renames before accepting, but I see your point and I definitely had the same initial reaction lol

80
submitted 5 months ago by d_ohlin@lemmy.world to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

Hadn't seen this here yet, a co-worker of mine sent it my way so I'm just spreading the word. Looks interesting, to say the least! Anyone tried this out or had any other experience with it yet?

45
submitted 6 months ago by d_ohlin@lemmy.world to c/3dprinting@lemmy.world

Anyone have any idea what might cause this sort of issue on PLA? I run into it frequently, but pretty much only when all of the following points are true:

  • the print has multiple parts, so the extruder spends a decent amount of time off of any given part (only one part from this print is pictured)
  • the affected part(s), like the picture above, have a relatively steep outward overhang, extending over the build plate
  • the outward overhang part is relatively narrow, as seen from a top view

This is from a printer with a 4028 fan (i.e. pretty massive airflow, server type fan) so even the 35-45% (based on layer time) I have it currently set at is more than 100% with single/dual 5015's or etc.

I guess my other option is to try supports, but this doesn't really seem like a situation where supports should be needed. Anyone ever had a similar problem and solved it without just turning the speed waaaayyyyyy down?

18
submitted 7 months ago by d_ohlin@lemmy.world to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

Anyone have any good suggestions for a simple, multi-user tasks App? I used Keep for a long while, and have been using Nextcloud for the past few years...but every Nextcloud upgrade lately it seems I hit new bugs and since I don't use Nextcloud for a while lot else I'm considering just parting ways with it.

That all being said, requirements I'm looking for would be the following:

  • Easily accessible on iOS and Android (native app is a big plus)
  • Simple interface with basic checkmark boxes that you can check off and the task disappears to some sort of "completed" list. No fancy markdown/etc. needed
  • Ability to share certain 'lists' with other users, so my wife and I can see shared lists
  • A Web UI is another huge plus
  • Self hosted is big obviously, but at the end of the day I just want something simple and reliable

If Nextcloud tasks is still among the better options I'll keep limping it along just figured I might as well see if anything new has popped up since I last went down this road. Thanks all!

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 10 points 8 months ago

Hey there! Love what you're doing with this project - it's super cool! I did want to ask a question though as I raised a GitHub issue a while back but received no response - is there any chance that the ability to automatically import .HTML bookmark backup files might be added in the future?

My use case is that every night I have my Chrome bookmarks automatically exported to a folder on my NAS - and currently I use ArchiveBox to read that file and archive any newly added sites. While this works, ArchiveBox has at times been rather finicky for me at least over the years, and so I'd love a little cleaner and more functional alternative. I'm not sure if others would find value in this being an option, but just a thought!

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 14 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

There was a study I read not too long ago that found the pre-movie anti piracy warning actually acted sort of reverse psychology on men, causing them to actually pirate more (as opposed to women). There have definitely been some gender-correlations in certain studies.

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Great! This is awesome thank you so much!!

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

Yeah, it's honestly a decent business model as it works

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 12 points 1 year ago

Nothing like a week and a half notice, eh? I honestly don't care for how much control over the internet Cloudflare has, but I've been extremely happy with them since transferring my domains over to them a few years back.

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago

Take them apart, add the magnets to my massive ball of old hard drive magnets, shed a tear, order a replacement, and then move on ๐Ÿ˜‚

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

This is sorta where I'm at. It's not an apples to apples thing I get that, and while I don't have a Prusa their standing in the 3d printing community is straight up legendary I know.

Wish it were a hair cheaper, because $1,300 assembled with enclosure kit (to make it as close to, say, X1C as possible) is still a bitter pill when only $200 more gets you abrasive printing ability, larger build volume, faster still, 4 color MMU, etc.

There is the quality angle, and the angle that a Prusa is conceivably infinitely repairable...which is a big deal. Just wish it were a few hundred cheaper to sort of compensate or allow for some of those upgrades.

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Ooooph. Owning both a modded to the nines Ender 3 v2 and a vCore 3.1, there's a part of me that wants to add the simplicy and MMU functionality of the X1C to the mix at some point....but this is uhhhhhhh scary. No thank you lol!!

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago

Lmao this is impressive even puts my pile to shame ๐Ÿ˜‚

[-] d_ohlin@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

These are all pretty good suggestions...a few points I'd add based solely on my personal experiences:

  • A lot of Amcrest's cameras are pretty solid for the price too. I've recently ordered some rebadged Dahuas from empire tech and haven't used them a ton but so far I'm thinking I'll really like them.
  • Check out night color cameras. They're not as "discreet" potentially as they generate their own visible light if it's pitch black out, but to me that's actually another security benefit...and the night time performance can be amazing.
  • Blue Iris is another pretty great piece of software. Super cheap for what it offers, and while it's a little more resource heavy being a full fledged NVR, you can pair it with things like Codeproject.ai and get some amazing results.
  • Double down on getting rid of wifi, if at all possible, and through any and every means possible. I too was initially pretty set on the convenience of wifi, but mixing wifi and cameras just never ends up in a great experience from everything I've ever had experience with. The absolute best I've ever seen is just "ok", and usually it's substantially worse.

Good luck!!

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d_ohlin

joined 1 year ago