Can you give me an example where the service I need to host is just for myself but I need to trick my brain into doing it? Like a private Jellyfin instance?
Findmysec
I use Kubernetes, and TBH the problem isn't the know-how (I can just learn what I don't know). The problem is a lack of motivation for doing it solely for myself; I know I should do it but why on earth can't I muster enough motivation to actually sit down and configure??
I kind of want to do it though. I want to be busy. I want to be hosting FOSS software for other people, like a SearX instance and maybe Invidious. The problem is, there's many more things that I should be doing in my homelab but for some reason I find more motivation in doing something that can help others rather than for myself
This is a good idea. A public facing guide that gives me motivation to maintain it
It's not a job. I just like hosting software for other people
If I have a node, can I use block explorers to check my transactions anonymously?
BTW, how would this work? Doesn't XMR automatically obfuscate this?
Now look here chap, Quadlet admittedly works fine. I personally just k3s anyway but .pod files work too.
Isn't being obedient to SELinux a good thing? You could set it to permissive if you want, but MAC systems are essential for security and I personally wouldn't go without them
I guess z-library needs to make a template on how to get a setup like theirs working. Unlimited subdomains lmao
Can someone explain to me why these services were on the clearnet to begin with?
Are these VNC?
Not sure - I don't feel like I undervalue myself (although I guess that's exactly what someone in my situation would say lmao). I just don't find motivation in doing something solely for myself, and am instead invested in things that I think the community could benefit from. An example would be wanting to run a Public Searx/Invidious instance