I post content. You view content. I moderate content. You no like, you no pay
Many people have said they have switched already and have said it works without issues (as far as they know). I’m sure there is a huge amount of sites and configs that didn’t make it into the lite version, I guess we’ll find out when a huge userbase refuses to migrate from chrome and installs the uBo-lite
Sent from their Android
Is dearrow actually good? Does it work for small streamers?
Self promote: [email protected] would love you too!
Mattermost does most of the required discord features. (Pun intended)
Is open source and is selfhost-able. I think there are some SaaS hosters if you need them too.
It should already have it. It’s not a new system, they are deciding to run their own server.
Be the change you want to see in the world.
I’ve been using Sudo for years.
Thoughts on the reboot-prequel?
You could use something like archivebox as that saves the whole page, or you could use Waybackmachine and force it to save the page via an add-on.
You could also setup your own yacy index and everytime you find an interesting site you could add it to yacy.
But this is kind of not what you are asking for. Archivebox is probably the closest, or using squidcache and literally caching every url you go to. 😅
Agreed. I manage ~200 end-clients like this via MDM.
For servers, saltstack.
Yep. Keep the WAN port dhcp Client enabled if you can, just one less thing to worry about.
Also take note that when you change the static IP of the new router it would conflict with the old one (and dhcp might fail). So you might need to set your local clients IP. Take note of the configuration it has and the steps to set it manually.
The rest all sounds right.
Your router’s IP can be anything. Choose any internal IP address on your subnet.
You can have 2 routers on the same subnet just make sure you disable DHCP on the new one while you perform the setup of everything else.
Then when you want to switch over, toggle on dhcp on the new router and replace the cables and you should be fine. You’ll know it’s working when you plug into it and get a default route of the new router.
As an Australian I can confirm everything is correct
Fwiw the AU ones are working like a treat
Open DNS is run by Cisco now. And is directly used for their proprietary anti malware systems
What do you mean?
Uptime? DNS resolution speed?
I’ve been using them for a good 10 years, occasionally a server goes down but then you just swap them in your config.
I set them on my router which acts as the cache server as well. So after a client resolves it, no other clients have issues.
OpenNIC is my favourite, community run, lots of servers have no logs
The only thing I want to know now more than ever is what Pokemon card is that!
Also nice keyboard
That’s why I use a SearXng instance. Why bother searching for something on 1 instance when you could search for it on 5 and then correlate the results.