Tried it a bit yesterday on Windows. Opened a Github link in it and Windows Defender killed the app saying it was a threat. Definitely a false positive but seemed odd to see the entire app just die instantly, lol.
Tried it a bit yesterday on Windows. Opened a Github link in it and Windows Defender killed the app saying it was a threat. Definitely a false positive but seemed odd to see the entire app just die instantly, lol.
Pretty sure that is the actual default location for standard EmulationStation, as opposed to ES-DE.
Run the docker compose file. That’s pretty much all you need to do.
You really shouldn’t trust anything important to a pi. I hope that you at the very least have that pi on a UPS if you’re going to risk your data this way.
Appreciate you taking the time, thanks.
How are you feeling about the Framework otherwise?
Thank you so much for posting this and reminding me about this project. I was looking to run his previous similar project that I think was just called Timeline when I saw he was working on this. Can’t wait to dig in.
What kind of options do you feel mbin is currently missing?
I wasn’t aware of GlazeWM before, so thanks for giving me something else to check out.
It’s one thing to show it off, it’s a whole other to actually show people how to set it up.
I cannot tell you about the public invidious instances but running my own privately does not proxy requests by default.
There are dedicated Jellyfin clients but I mainly just use the web client that is part of the server 90% of the time.
Proxmox maps user ids between itself and lxc containers and it took me a bit of time to figure it out. I would highly suggest reading the following link as it’s how I worked it out. I ended up chown’ing to 101000 which maps to user 1000 - the default user - in my lxcs.
https://www.itsembedded.com/sysadmin/proxmox_bind_unprivileged_lxc/
Leave Kodi behind in 2010 and switch over to Jellyfin for better results.
An explanation of what SimHub is might be a good idea.
By the way, running synapse - docker or not - is a challenge. It can be very complex especially if you are interested in adding gateways to other services and such. Attempting to use https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy might be a better choice as even though it is A LOT, it has a ton of good documentation and you can grow with it as it can help you install various different Matrix servers, gateways and clients as well.
Good luck, hope to hear more about how you get on with it.
It took a little time to get the hang of it, but stick with it and it will get so much easier and it’ll make self-hosting anything you want less of a pain in the future.
As it says in the image, the file is /data/homeserver.yaml. Your other questions are all answered by looking at the way the file is formatted.
Uh… yeah, those are assumptions I made because I went through it entirely myself previously so… yeah.
Appreciate the browser extensions link, thanks.