exchange online shell
Ashley
- 1 Post
- 86 Comments
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Linux@lemmy.ml•Immich 1.136 Photo and Video Backup Brings Breaking ChangesEnglish
1·4 months agoHow is it alarmist? Those are breaking changes that require attention
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•GitHub - gardner/LocalLanguageTool: Self-hosted LanguageTool private instance is an offline alternative to GrammarlyEnglish
27·6 months agoOffline as in, the server software doesn’t require the internet.
(looks at my 230 line config)
yeah… maybe
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•C4illin/ConvertX: Self-hosted online file converter that supports 1000+ formatsEnglish
1·7 months agoYeah I don’t care, i was clarifying their point to you because it seemed like you didn’t understand.
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•C4illin/ConvertX: Self-hosted online file converter that supports 1000+ formatsEnglish
2·7 months agoI think the point is that it could be a desktop app
cons:
- dependencies
we get it and don’t care. they’re convenient and work well.
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Need help getting domain to resolve over LANEnglish
41·7 months agoIt’s called split horizon dns and it’s not that bad/nightmarish.
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Need help getting domain to resolve over LANEnglish
1·7 months agoYep, so if they’re able to access npm via the ip this is likely it.
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Need help getting domain to resolve over LANEnglish
2·7 months agoRight. Can you access your npm server via the ip in your browser? Even if it’s not docmost that it returns?
If you can, it’s probably your browser using its own dns so you’ll have to change that to adguard as well.
NAT Loopback can be a bit finicky but once you set it up there’s no tinkering, it’ll just work forever. The only problem (which really doesn’t matter a bit with a document sharing platform) is that packets first have to go through the router. If your server and client are on the same network then they can communicate directly with each other instead.
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Need help getting domain to resolve over LANEnglish
5·7 months agoI’ll start from the beginning.
You’re hosting a service on your LAN, and using port forwarding to expose this service to the internet on your public ip.
The problem is accessing your public ip from your private network. There are two ways to solve this.
a) NAT Loopback, which is a setting or rule you may be able to enable or create on your router to forward packets destined for your public ip (the ones from your private network) to your private server
b) Split horizon DNS, which is actually what you’re doing. Where you set it up so in one network (in this case the internet) you get one result, and on another network (your LAN) you get a different result.
If I had to guess, what’s happening is your dns isn’t resolving properly, and when your computer is trying to reach out to your public ip. The thing with dns is it’s a bit finicky, there are many different places to set your dns server.
First, you should check if it’s resolving correctly. It’ll show you the ip it resolves to when you ping it. If it resolves to your public ip, make sure your dns settings aren’t being overridden by your operating system, and try clearing the cache
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How do you handle absolutely critical alerts on your Android phone?English
3·7 months agoi’ve heard the accuracy is off with those… but cmon 50% still means it’s right half the time
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Linux@lemmy.ml•Is there a way to send your phone calls to your laptop?English
10·7 months agoDo you have any resources on how to do this? i’d like to give it a go as well
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Linux@lemmy.ml•Resource/learning material for an assignment on computer networks
2·8 months agoCouple things:
Maybe opnsense over pfsense, pfsense people aren’t nice Proxmox is great but consider running docker in an lxc container as well
Debian is a good option but I’d actually recommend Fedora. It’s been very stable for me.
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•Google changes Chrome extension policies following the Honey link scandal
30·8 months agoBecause nobody has the mental bandwidth to think in depth about every decision they make
Ashley@lemmy.cato
Technology@beehaw.org•HP to build future products atop grave of flopped 'AI pin' • The Register
2·9 months agoHardly Practical

Probably session tokens?