I wanted to start using a budgeting program to better organize my spending/ goals, and basically narrowed it down to 3 --YNAB, Actual and Quicken Simplifi....
Just SSH dropping. Everything on the VM side is ok.
And yes, the computer I’m using is on .6.X (LAN VLAN) and the VM is on .1.X (MGMT VLAN).
The management VLAN is only accessible by a couple devices and this is one of them. To get PiAlert to be able to see devices on the LAN VLAN, it has to have an interface to be able to ARP from.
Yeah, such a nightmare, lol. If I ever feel like hosting a honeypot I’ll probably DMZ it or use a VPS or something, but I’m going to change gears on projects for now.
Here's a non-paywalled link to an article published in the Washington Post a few days ago. It's great to see this kind of thing getting some mainstream attention. Young children have not made an informed decision about whether they want their photos posted online.
I recently found out about Circles and was hoping to migrate friends and family to it, but it’s just too much of a learning curve to get things set up.
I read through their EULA the other day, and it seems everything is E2EE so only the recipients can see the data, but they do have access to some stuff such as last login, usernames, etc.
I have a few friends using it, and it’s nice once you get it going, but adding/ finding friends is a bit of a headache in my experience
So, I have an old 3rd or 4th gen Intel NUC that’s I used to use to run Kodibuntu back in the day. I’m thinking of repurposing it into a low power home server to run the *arr suite, Jellyfin and nextcloud plus maybe some other bits. Nothing too taxing that I can see....
After looking into travel routers a bit, I quickly came across Gl.iNet which seems to be a leader in the space. It seems they use OpenWRT which is great, but with some special sauce on top of it....
YNAB vs Quicken Simplifi
I wanted to start using a budgeting program to better organize my spending/ goals, and basically narrowed it down to 3 --YNAB, Actual and Quicken Simplifi....
Recommendation for software/ apps
Hello,...
PiAlert without WAN access
For those of you who know of PiAlert or similar projects/forks like NetAlertX, do you know of any that can run without WAN access?...
Network conflict on VM with multiple interfaces
So, I finally got this project (PiAlert) working how I’d like....
Homelab Honeypot
I recently installed an instance of TPot Honeypot, and it looks and feels pretty fantastic....
Pi Alert VLAN issue
I recently discovered Pi Alert (and the various forks of it) and it seems like something that might be useful on my homelab....
Possible change in job title
Hey all,...
The Dyson Show nearing 1,000 episodes!
This small YouTuber has been pumping out dad jokes for almost 1,000 episodes (999 currently)....
As the Internet Gets Scarier, More Parents Keep Their Kids’ Photos Offline (getpocket.com)
Here's a non-paywalled link to an article published in the Washington Post a few days ago. It's great to see this kind of thing getting some mainstream attention. Young children have not made an informed decision about whether they want their photos posted online.
Have an old NUC...
So, I have an old 3rd or 4th gen Intel NUC that’s I used to use to run Kodibuntu back in the day. I’m thinking of repurposing it into a low power home server to run the *arr suite, Jellyfin and nextcloud plus maybe some other bits. Nothing too taxing that I can see....
And I'll vote for him again (lemmy.ml)
Element Call: Secure video conferencing for Matrix (element.io)
Element Call is an open source end-to-end encrypted video and voice conferencing solution built on the Matrix protocol for secure communication....
Dell tells remote workers that they won’t be eligible for promotion (arstechnica.com)
Report highlights big turnaround from Dell’s previous pro-WFH stance.
Modern web bloat means some pages load 21MB of data - entry-level phones can't run some simple web pages, and some sites are harder to render than PUBG (www.tomshardware.com)
Gl.iNet no longer open source?
After looking into travel routers a bit, I quickly came across Gl.iNet which seems to be a leader in the space. It seems they use OpenWRT which is great, but with some special sauce on top of it....