I already did a small modification on our street we live in, because it was not a one-way street anymore. But we also have a vacation home on a vineyard where the road does not even exist and I figured if I can log gps coordinations while going up to the gate then maybe I can use those coordinates to import them as a way in OpenStreetMap to be precise. Or, since it exists on google maps, maybe getting coordination data from there and use that to create the way. Is something like this possible?
varaki
🤘linux, open source, metal
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Thanks, eventually I went for the subdomain approach, it turned out to be a less headache and working just fine with wildcard letsencrypt ssl cert.
Thanks everyone, then I will go with the subdomain approach.
This is something I had as plan B 🙂 I’m not against it at all. 😃
I think your best bet would be to buy your own router and then use that one instead of the ISP provided router.
If you want to go more deeper, you can maybe choose one that is supported by OpenWrt. You can use the Table of hardware or the firmware selector to check if your desired router has OpenWrt support.
varaki@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•About Reddit, Lemmy and self-hosting it on KubernetesEnglish21·2 years agofost.hu, lol, nice one 😃
varaki@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•About Reddit, Lemmy and self-hosting it on KubernetesEnglish01·2 years agofost.hu, lol, nice one 😃
varaki@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[Question] Disk Space for Lemmy and Mastodon instances3·2 years agoCheck out this post: https://lemmy.world/post/538280
varaki@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•I am thinking about switching from Windows to Debian 12 BookwormEnglish2·2 years agoI’m using Debian with the testing branch for a while on a Lenovo T470, haven’t had any issues with it ever.
I installed OpenWrt on my home router and set up wireguard on it. If you have dinamic IP address assigned by your ISP, like me, you also have to setup a dynamic dns updater on the router. I use duckdns.org. Then you have to open the port for wireguard on the router. Here’s a video guide on how to do it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bo2AsW4BMOo