Morning rush hour over the Atlantic. Most aircraft are flying on "tracks", a set of routes defined daily to safely separate traffic in areas where there is no radar coverage.
An important factor in the daily redefinition is for eastbound flights to take advantage of jet streams, and for westbound flights to more easily avoid them. The eastbound tracks are therefore sometimes quite a bit south of the geometrically shortest great-circle routes.
So I got a Raspberry Pi 4 for Christmas and I think I’m going to use it to go #SelfHosted with certain services and educate myself on #DigitalSovereignty. Do any mastonauts have resource recommendations for me? Complete linux/networking noob here.
——
He recibido un #RaspberryPi 4 por navidad y estoy pensando en usarlo para aprender sobre #AutoHospedaje y #SoberaníaDigital. ¿Algún mastonauta con recomendaciones de recursos con los que aprender? Novato absoluto en linux y redes informáticas.
@Joe, what I love about #YunoHost is that it’s not just a one-click install for web apps like #Nextcloud etc., but everything else:
• setting up SSL is literally just one click and poof you’ve got #LetsEncrypt set up
• (sub)domains are equally simple to handle
• for #DNS it diagnoses what’s wrong and offers copy-paste entries (for some registrars even a single-click import)
• #email? automatic
The only thing I had to get my hands dirty with was setting #NAT on the router.
I wonder how to rebroadcast an #HTTP audio stream into a #UDP port with #ffmpeg while the client that will listen into the UDP is behind #NAT. I've been searching for answers and doing some trial-and-error, but no joy.
I really wonder how #Discord does #RTP while I'm behind NAT... :sagume_think: It's really useful when I want to listen to #GensokyoRadio while in a crappy #WiFi network
Can some of my #TechMastodon help me make a decision regarding a new 2.5G eth (min) DHCP/NAT gateway (NO WiFi plz!) for my home network? I'll accept small biz solutions too.
I've seen a lot of people saying things that amount to "those tech nerds need to understand that nobody wants to use the command line!", but I don't actually think that's the hardest part of self-hosting today. I mean, even with a really slick GUI like ASUSTOR NASes provide, getting a reliable, non-NATed connection, with an SSL...
I don't think "command line hard" is the worst part of self-hosting.
I've seen a lot of people saying things that amount to "those tech nerds need to understand that nobody wants to use the command line!", but I don't actually think that's the hardest part of self-hosting today. I mean, even with a really slick GUI like ASUSTOR NASes provide, getting a reliable, non-NATed connection, with an SSL...