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Hmm possibly a connector from the battery to motherboard that didn’t fully seat?
Or if it’s an aftermarket battery maybe it doesn’t have the right hardware in it to talk to the computer or something.
Hmm possibly a connector from the battery to motherboard that didn’t fully seat?
Or if it’s an aftermarket battery maybe it doesn’t have the right hardware in it to talk to the computer or something.
It reads that data direct from the batteries BMS hardware, I don’t think battery calibration has been a thing since NiCD/NiMH days in the 90s and stuff.
Do you have your services set up with restart=unless-stopped
? I wonder if that would auto restart them after OOM.
Should work fine with another tunnel, just duplicate how you set it up the first time.
Are the Wi-Fi drivers on windows up to date?
I have low power usage stuff so I just leave it on.
Honestly there isn’t a good one, Thunderbird is as close as it gets but it’s buggy with things like CardDAV and it’s slow.
Sorry was busy but wanted to make the comment at least earlier. I think .local is specific to mDNS, but using just the hostname (ie; mypcname) should work as well.
DNS hostnames
Proton has pretty poor third party support
Xpipe does ssh and sftp pretty well, the rest can be done with htop and stuff if you need detailed system stats to diagnose something.
127.0.0.1 is localhost which sounds right if prowlarr is in the same machine as the other services.
Is prowlarr running?
Most likely an update broke something if it suddenly stopped working.
Debian is always the answer for a stable, easy to set up server OS.
You don’t need to use Docker if you don’t want to, you can install Plex/Jellyfin using their normal apt repos instead.
Bonus round: anyone who’s ever transferred Plex servers from win to Linux (insert flavor), is it actually possible to keep my collections and playlists and stuff?
Yes, transfer your plex database and that will come with it.
No, but you should already have good backups in place (right??) so restoring if something breaks isn’t too hard.
It’s not self-hosted, but Tailscale funnels are also an option.
Quality of their products maybe? Cloudflare feels like they put a lot of effort into their product, Google not so much with how buggy everything is and how often they just abandon products they offer.
I can’t say I’ve seen anything like that on the webservers I’ve exposed to the internet. But it could vary based on the IP you have if it’s a target for something already I suppose.
Frankly I’m surprised that machine I setup didn’t get hacked.
How could it if all you had was a basic webserver running?
Getting DDOSed or hacked is very very rare for anyone self hosting. DDOS doesn’t really happen to random people hosting a few small services, and hacking is also rare because it requires that you expose something with a significant enough vulnerability that someone has a way into the application and potentially the server behind it.
But it’s good to take some basic steps like an isolated VLAN as you’ve mentioned already, but also don’t expose services unless you need to. Immich for example if it’s just you using it will work just fine without being exposed to the internet.
Seems like a good way to do it, would be fun to try that setup myself.
There’s essentially no overhead with containers. Performance is almost identical to bare metal in most cases.