I am pretty sure, this one uses real photos to generate a random face on every refresh of the site.
Somewhere between Linux woes, gaming, open source, 3D printing, recreational coding, and occasional ranting.
🇬🇧 / 🇩🇪
I am pretty sure, this one uses real photos to generate a random face on every refresh of the site.
Mine was an ELSA Erazor III LT (the name somehow stuck). It was an offer that was bundled with horribly bad and clumly mechanical shutter 3D goggles. I remember trying Half Life with it. It was rattling all the time and the 3D effect was mediocre.
Why does it matter?
I want my data with me (i.e. available in the accoutn I mainly use) and not on some other account I don’t use anymore.
“If you enter a room it feels like someone was leaving” - but in an ironic way.
losing all your comments and posts history
They are not lost, they are still there
Yes, they’re there, in the old account on the old instance, and not here, where the new account on the new instance is.
Lemmy shouldn’t be used for messaging
That is entirely not the point. (Also: messaging on Lemy and instant messaging have nothing in common and should not be confused.)
you can then start using your new account as if it was the old one.
Except the things I mentioned.
Migrating or moving an account is not part of ActivityPub. Mastodon extended the protocol to have a move
activity.
Unless Lemmy devs come up with something similar and extend the protocol, there is no way to properly move/migrate the account to another instance. The current solution is to create a new account on your desired instance and then export the data on your old instance and import it on your new instance and leave a note in your bio for old instance/account[1]
Start here for details on this. According to the devs this would be nice to have but is of very low priority.
ignoring the fact that you need to re-subscruibe to communities with manual approval and losing all your comments and posts history as well as all private messaging history and contacts. ↩︎
Yeah. While I can dockerize those applications, all I checked out lack modern features and concepts/designs. It all feels heavily outdated technology-wise.
federated blog
I wonder what federated blog (or publishing platform) isn’t stuck in pre-Docker era, though.
You can run those as single-user instances or with approval of users so you can use those instances for your family and/or friends only.
The usual suspects: Mastodon (or mastodon-compatible servers like GoToSocial), PeerTube, Pixelfed, etc.
I am disappointed …
German here.
I am not writing anything in my code in German. All of my code, my variables, my default texts, my comments, my documentation, my UI strings, etc. are always and explicitly in English.
The only German I use, is when I provide translations for UI or documentation.
Ah yes, the good old “testing in production” 😆
Good luck!
Startup times getting down below 20s definitely helps with this.
Absolutely. SSDs, systemd, and recent kernels definitely help. From the moment the EFI hands over to the kernel, my ca. 9 years old system is ready for login 3 seconds later.
What’s your typical “stand-by” mode for your computer when you’re not using it?
Off.
Ideally I’d like to create a simple wiki for creative projects […] and give others editing access […] I’m moderately tech savvy
Codeberg allows to create wikis, even if this isn’t their main feature.
The best thing: It is Git-based. So you have a regular Git repository for your wiki and you don’t need to learn a new workflow. You can also edit pages in the browser. Permissions are a no-brainer of course. For editing pages, Markdown is used, so you don’t even need to learn a new markup language.
Since Codeberg is an open source platform run by a non-profit association all and everything is free to use.
And if you ever want to migrate to somewhere else, just git pull
your wiki and you’re good to go.
Loss of control of this data would be catastrophic, so I took its security very seriously.
Ask yourself: “If my current system is unavailable: How screwed am I?”
If the answer is anything less than “Not screwed at all!”, then it is time for a backup - regardless of what system you’re using or plan to use.
I just checked their FAQ. They have information about SSH, SMB, RDP, connecting private networks (VPN), etc. available. I did not dig deeper regarding specific ports, though.
You could always use a reverse proxy on your side just accepting port 443 connections (https) and forwarding to a specific docker container using a specific port without the outside world even knowing.
People walking too slow to stay behind them but too fast to pass in a reasonable amount of time and distance.