ZeldaFreak

joined 2 years ago
[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

Ich kann im Internet auf die schnelle nicht finden, seit wann es die beiden Puddings gab. Die Firma gibt es aber schon seit 1980 und ich meine damals kannte ich die Marke schon, wo man mir das Werbegeschenk angedreht hatte. Ich bin mir aber nicht sicher ob die Produkte auf Sojabasis mir je schmecken werden. Vor 10 Jahren habe ich mit Milchersatzprodukten rum experimentiert, wegen meiner Laktoseintoleranz, und da habe ich nur einen Kakao von Kaufland gemocht.

Ich muss aber fairerweise sagen, ich gehe jetzt nicht hin und kaufe mir jedes Ersatzprodukt und probiere es, aber oft geschmacklich nicht gut. Mein letztes Ersatzprodukt war ein Frischkäseersatz mit Tomaten von Lidl. Schmeckte als ob ich an einem Stück Fett lutsche mit etwas Tomatengeschmack. Das hätte ich eher als Streichfett fürs Brot genommen und dann oben drauf Belag. Es gibt aber auch gute vegane Produkte. Das vegane Smoothie Erdbeereis von Lidl, das schmeckt geil. Oder die vegane Bifi Roll von Rügenwalder ist genau so räudig wie die Fleischvariante.

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Haben die die Rezeptur geändert? Hab vor über 10 Jahren von Alpro eine Tüte geschenkt bekommen mit Kostproben von derem Schoko und Vanillepudding. Gratis schmeckt ja normalerweise immer besser, aber das Zeug war dermaßen Ekelhaft, dass es in den Müll gewandert ist. Und dass will schon was heißen wenn ich Lebensmittel wegschmeiße, weil ich bin kein Fan davon Lebensmittel weg zu schmeißen.

Von Alpro mag ich aber den Haferdrink "This is not Milk". Schmeckt halt in Cornflakes oder mit Kakao wie Kuhmilch.

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

I do have both (VPN and Reverse Proxy) running. For VPN my router uses Wireguard and at work we use Wireguard as well. You can alter the config in such a way, that only internal traffic would get routed through your VPN. I love this, because for regular traffic, I'm not bound to the upload at my home network or with work, route my personal traffic through the company internet or lose access to my own network.

Reverse proxy isn't bad either. I have a DNS running at home, that redirects my domain used for home stuff, directly to the reverse proxy. This way I can block certain stuff, I want a fancy domain but not be accessed from the outside, because its not needed or not set up properly.

With a VPN, you would be more secure, because its a single instance you need to keep safe. With regular updates and set up properly, this shouldn't be an issue. But I would suggest reading tech news portals, that do cover security breaches of well known software.

With a reverse proxy setup I use, I must trust so many things. I must trust my reverse proxy with the firewall and then each server I run.

But keep one thing in mind. If you for example use stuff like Home Assistant, that you access in the background, it wouldn't work if you connect via a VPN. With Wireguard I can be connected 24/7 to my VPN, even at home. With the previous VPN my router used (I guess it was OpenVPN), this wasn't possible.

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

A coworker uses it as backup and he is happy about it. I have rented an auction server (a dedicated server) from them and on it is my Nextcloud and stuff and I backup my NAS to my Nextcloud and my Server to my NAS via WebDAV. Zero issues. I had once contact with their technical support, because a Harddrive failed. I was a low priority case but they handled my case exceptionally fast. Opened the ticket on a Friday after a holiday on 23:09 and at 23:51 the hard drive was changed.

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 5 points 3 weeks ago

When its about taking a shower, the gym (you may can take a free lesson or pay for a single session), the swimming pool/spa and even truck stops have showers. Also it can be a topic to talk about and maybe she invites you over.

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 3 points 4 weeks ago

I kinda worded it wrong. Some ISPs do give out full IPv4 addresses but do rotate them, because they can and do charge more for static IPs. This doesn't have something to do with a lack of v4 addresses. Only DSlite has something to do with the lack of v4 addresses.

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 24 points 4 weeks ago (2 children)

IP Bans are usually pointless. Not all ISPs give a connection a static IP or even solely an IP (DSlite). The reason is they don't want private people hosting stuff and generating more traffic and they can charge you more. My ISP (Vodafone Cable in Germany) didn't even gave me an IPv4 to use (it's called DSlite/Dual stack lite), meaning I was behind a NAT on their end and many shared that IP. I did ask them nicely if I could get a real IPv4 for certain stuff and they gave it to me, but only when I book the upload boost for 5€ + a month. It's not static but it only changes when my router is disconnected for a long time (I don't know the exact time but at least several hours up to an day).

So usually an IP ban makes only sense for a limited time or specific ranges from companies (for example VPNs or hosting services that don't care who books their service).

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 3 points 4 weeks ago

Yes, they are different. I thing your "IKEA pairing" would be touchlink paring. I would say connecting the device through the controller offers the most flexibility. When you use Zigbee2MQTT, you can take a look at https://www.zigbee2mqtt.io/supported-devices/ what your device exposes. Sometimes you could loose a feature. For example the "VINDSTYRKA air quality and humidity sensor" can be connected directly to the STARKVIND air purifier, so it uses its value for the air quality. I never tried if I could connect it both ways.

On the other hand there is my Paulmann RGB remote control. I could connect the remote directly to lamps. I decided to do the automatons via HA and it has 116 different actions. Obviously its quite the task to do the automations, especially how I need to access the values.

But to not frighten you, its not always complicated. I have a few buttons and they aren't complicated. Connect through Z2M, press every button in each variation (single, double click, hold), add the automation and then what happens.

You can make it more complicated (and fun). My hue dimmer switch could have 5 scenes via the hue hub but not via HA and Z2M. With Node-Red I programmed a small logic, that just counts how often I pressed the on button, within a certain time limit. It then cycles through my selected scenes. I can add as little and as much as I like. Oh and to clarify: Node-Red can be added as Addon to HA. It allows node bases programming. I find it easier then HA Automation, because it looks visually clearer. Also its way cooler, because it has more options.

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

My passiv cooled Pi5 (case as radiator) with HA is at 44°C (room is at 33°C). Idk how hot it gets on a regular basis, I just enabled the system monitor integration right now.

I mean with CPU temps, thermal throttling starts usually at 80°C, so nothing to worry.

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

Doesn't work Invalid parameter --. I have zero clue where it gets the --. But the issue would be new devices or other ports. I did this manually once, needed to unplug my PC and needed to do this once again. At least there seems to be an option doing this in bulk but it's not optimal.

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

You can configure it. Whats worse, my current PC actually allows every device to wake up my PC. My old PC didn't allowed it and only allowed the power button and WoL. You can turn it off for each device (there is no bulk option, thanks MS), but when you plug in a new device... Recently I forgot to unplug my mouse from charging and my PC started right away.

I have no problem that there is this option. Might be handy in the right situation. I have a problem that you can't configure it easily. But I guess hibernation is something that Devs forget these days. I have a few programs that don't play along nicely.

[–] ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world 35 points 1 month ago (5 children)

Here people even "steal" books from public bookcases and sell them.

For people who aren't familiar, let me explain: These public bookcases are a weatherproof shelf, old phone booth or something in the streets. The concept is you can take any book and leave any book. There are no written rules and you can keep a book if you like or just read it and put it back. In recent years people started to scan the barcodes and checked what books they can sell. There is a debate going on if people should mark these books or not, so they can't be sold.

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