

Nephele with SERVE_LISTINGS turned on and a read only mount.
It shows listings in the browser, just like Apache, but can also be accessed with a file browser, because it’s a WebDAV server.
Nephele with SERVE_LISTINGS turned on and a read only mount.
It shows listings in the browser, just like Apache, but can also be accessed with a file browser, because it’s a WebDAV server.
This is the Linux Gaming community on Lemmy.
We’re opinionated? This dude literally said on Twitter that Linux is useless and nobody should use it.
Dude, fuck this guy all the way through. He’s such a piece of shit. He shouldn’t be in our community.
Flatpaks are awesome. Flathub is awesome. :)
Where’s the camera?
They needed an inquiry?
Just call it a religious symbol.
I don’t think you understand that quote. “Eat the rich” is part of the full quote, “when the people shall have nothing more to eat, they will eat the rich”. It’s not about killing rich people, it’s about class struggle and avoiding the situation where the wealthy have accumulated so much that the people are starving. In other words, it’s a warning to the rich not to take so much that they are the only food left.
It’s their machine. It’s a front door.
The right to stunt your children.
That’s not a vulnerability. That’s intended and desired behavior. It was really useful in this case too.
I should mention that the WebDAV share is password protected, so only he has access to do that.
Something really fun I found out recently, when my friend lost all access to his system except for a single WebDAV share by accidentally turning off all his remote admin access:
If you write “b” to /proc/sysrq-trigger, it will immediately reboot the system (like holding down the reset button, so inherently a bit dangerous).
He was running Nephele with / mounted as the share, so luckily he just uploaded that file with a single “b” in it, and all his remote admin stuff came back up after the reboot.
This absolutely can happen to stable projects. This has happened with Mastodon many times, and Mastodon has been stable for years.
It also has happened with Nextcloud many times, and again, Nextcloud has been stable for years.
It’s not a stability thing, it’s an automation thing. We as devs can only automate so much. At a certain point, it becomes up to you, as the administrator, to manually change things. Things like infrastructure changes, and database migrations, where the potential downtime if we automate it is something we need to consider.
This is very cool, but also very dangerous. Many projects release versions that need some sort of manual intervention to be updated, and automatically updating to new versions on docker can lead to data loss in those situations.
Here’s a recent example from Immich:
https://github.com/immich-app/immich/releases/tag/v1.133.0
It is my humble opinion that teaching newbies to do automatic updates will cause them to lose data and break things, which will probably sour them from ever self hosting again.
Automatic OS updates are fine, and docker update notifications are fine, but automatic docker updates are just too dangerous.
This is what you got out of Mamdani’s win?
Oh no! We’re so divided. Just because there’s one progressive winning notably lately. Omg, all hope is lost. The dems are doomed. We’re divided into a billion pieces.
Fuck outta here with this bullshit headline.
You’re probably holding your controller wrong.
That does make sense considering every other developed country has free healthcare and literally 100% of their young men spend every waking hour playing video games.
He’s been super anti-linux and has stated that it’s useless and nobody should use it on Twitter. He’s also just generally an asshole.