• 0 Posts
  • 15 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 16th, 2023

help-circle
  • milkjug@lemmy.worldtolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldWindows 11
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    3
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    Rectangle Pro for me, 100%. I bought the paid version too as I loved it.

    I like my windows organized and macOS has this penchant for chaos. Windoze at least has FancyZones in PowerToys which is chef’s kiss perfectly done, and I can’t live without it.










  • +1 for this, I have an active subscription with Bitwarden, for US$10 a year it’s worth many times that in the value and utility it provides me. I considered self-hosting the service but I decided to just stick with the cloud version since they likely have better resilience than my homelab. It’d suck if my home network is down for whatever reason and I need urgent access to my vault without a local copy within reach.




  • Thanks for asking! I think this is more or less an architectural choice, and I was vaguely adhering to the microservice design philosophy. While spinning up duplicate services for each container that requires it has its advantages in terms of isolation and what not, I wanted to:

    • Be light on resource requirements whenever possible,
    • Follow industry practices as far as possible in case it becomes useful at my day-job (it sometimes does),
    • Train myself to be an amateur sysadmin, at least on my homelab.

    Hence, all of my docker containers are deduped and reused whenever possible, and follow my own notations and conventions, as well as static and opiniated networking. It has been a really fun journey so far, but I’m also a glutton for punishment and sleep-less nights ;p


  • Interesting! I didn’t quite see that line about the postgres password and pictrs API key having to match. So far, I haven’t had issues with my instance with them being different values.

    If Lemmy really assume by convention that the postgres password and the pictrs key must be the same, it sounds like a huge architectural WTF and massive security risk, so I assume it shouldn’t be.

    For postgres versions, my solution would be to host different postgres versions in their own containers if there’s no other elegant way to avoid it. Then the URI should point to the respective postgres containers as necessary.