It’s good but it’s also been bought out by, at least to me, an ‘unknown’ early this year. Since then, there’s been a couple outages though nothing too drastic. New owner also promised to only make changes that are ‘thoughtful and focused on making your experience better’ but I am still cautiously eyeing other options since then - I’ve learned never to trust those words by new owners.
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hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Nextcloud logs me out whenever I restartEnglish
1·10 days agoIt might turn out to be something different - but just in case it does log you out after a system restart (but maybe not after network disconnect) it would probably have something to do with kwallet (the key ring which has your credentials) not unlocking correctly.
If that’s the case this or this might be further pointers to look into.
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Technology@lemmy.world•Google's Agentic AI wipes user's entire HDD without permission in catastrophic failureEnglish
2·10 days agoI think you really nailed the crux of the matter.
With the ‘autocomplete-like’ nature of current LLMs the issue is precisely that you can never be sure of any answer’s validity. Some approaches try by giving ‘sources’ next to it, but that doesn’t mean those sources’ findings actually match the text output and it’s not a given that the sources themselves are reputable - thus you’re back to perusing those to make sure anyway.
If there was a meter of certainty next to the answers this would be much more meaningful for serious use-cases, but of course by design such a thing seems impossible to implement with the current approaches.
I will say that in my personal (hobby) projects I have found a few good use cases of letting the models spit out some guesses, e.g. for the causes of a programming bug or proposing directions to research in, but I am just not sold that the heaviness of all the costs (cognitive, social, and of course environmental) is worth it for that alone.
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Is laying on your stomach every once in a while good for you?English
5·10 days agoIf it feels good for you, it is probably good.

(For the record, I do think it’s really good advice but that instantly came to mind) :)
Holyy, thanks for this. I can finally put a name to it. Was wondering with my partner for ages what sometimes suddenly befalls us, especially if we’re lying in a weird position.
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Searching for eBook reader solutionEnglish
2·11 days agoI’ve been exclusively reading my fiction books (all epubs) on Readest and absolutely love it. Recently I also started using it for my nonfiction books and articles (mostly pdf) as an experiment, and it’s workable but a little more rough around the edges still.
You can highlight and annotate, and export all annotations for a book once you are done, for which I have set up a small pipeline to directly import them into my reference management software.
It works pretty well with local storage (though I don’t believe it does ‘auto-imports’ of new files by default) and I’ve additionally been using their free hosted offering to sync my book progress. It’s neat and free up to 500mb of books, but you’re right that I would also prefer a byo storage solution, perhaps in the future.
The paid upgrades are mostly for AI stuff and translations which I don’t really concern myself with.
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Journiv self hosted journal: Now with markdown and inline media supportEnglish
4·11 days agoBeen seeing the posts pop up recently and I really like the look of your software, bookmarked for future
jrnlintegration possibilities.But what a missed opportunity to not have a Journiv Ahead in your second headline :)
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Veronica Explains why she doesn't stream (from Netflix etc) #algorithmic_helplessness_sucksEnglish
8·13 days agoOpen source/selfhost projects 100% keep track of how many people star a repo, what MRs are submitted, and even usage/install data.
I feel it is important to make a distinction here, though:
GitHub, the for-profit, non-FOSS, Microsoft-owned platform keeps track of the ‘stars of a repo’, not the open-source self-host projects themselves. Somebody hosts their repo forge on Codeberg, sr.ht, their own infrastructure or even GitLab? There’s generally very little to no algorithmic number-crunching involved. Same for MR/PRs.
Additionally - from my knowledge - very few fully FOSS programs have extensive usage/install telemetry, and even fewer opt-out versions. Tracking which couldn’t be disabled I’ve essentially never heard of in that space, because every time someone does go in that direction the public reaction is usually very strong (see e.g. Audacity).
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•**How** should I properly document my homelab?English
2·17 days agoInteresting, so Metal3 is basically kubernetes-managed baremetal nodes?
Over the last years I’ve cobbled together a nice Ansible-driven IaC setup, which provisions Incus and Docker on various machines. It’s always the ‘first mile’ that gets me struggling with completely reproducible bare-metal machines. How do I first provision them without too much manual interference?
Ansible gets me there partly, but I would still like to have e.g. the root file system running on btrfs which I’ve found hard to accomplish with just these tools when first provisioning a new machine.
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Need help resisting the dark side (using Windows)English
5·17 days agoThe fact that even bios is only 720p makes me think @Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de in the other answer may be on the right track.
You don’t have an amazing amount of time, so perhaps eliminating variables one by one may make sense before digging through the bios downgrade rabbit hole.
- By trying a less bespoke distro it may be possible to eliminate distro doubts quicker. Try mint or fedora, see if they scale correctly in Live mode, and if they do, perhaps also when installed?
- otherwise, do you have a different monitor to exclude that variable as well?
- if other distros work, it’s unlikely to be a bios issue. If they don’t, which seems likely from the description, then you can follow the firmware discussion and return your efforts to bazzite
This will take a little more upfront time but may save you some in the long run
Edit: also, the CPU should have integrated graphics, right? You can prob eliminate another variable just by trying to boot into a distro once without the GPU connected. if everything suddenly works, you are closer to the cause, if not you’ve at least eliminated the gpu
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Tutorial series for self hosting beginners?English
6·21 days agoWhen I was stumbling on some of his output it unfortunately felt very click-baity, always playing on your FOMO if you didn’t set up/download/buy the next best thing until the other next best thing in the video after.
In other words, I think he’s cool to check out to get to know of a thing, but to get a deeper level of understanding how a thing works I would recommend written materials. There are good caddy/nginx tutorials out there, but a linux networking book will get your understanding further yet.
If it has to be video, I would at least recommend a little more slowed down, long-form content like Learn Linux TV.
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Headscale vs Netbird vs Pangolin - How do you like selfhosting them?English
6·28 days agoI’ve been using NetBird for quite a while now. It has grown from an experiment in connecting to the server without exposing it to quite a stable setup that I make use of every day, and even got my partner and some of my family to use. That is the hosted offering, however, not me self hosting my own server component.
For a couple of months now, I’ve been eyeing pangolin though. It just seems like such an upgrade concerning identity and SSO - but equally a complete overhaul of my infrastructure and a steep learning curve.
I am itching to get it running but would probably have to approach it step-by-step, and roll it out pretty slowly, while transferring the existing services.
Oh is there still an active modding scene for the game?
It’s been years and years but the games were such a gem for half-way chill LAN party battles while having a snack, a chat and a bit of an interstellar romp.
Do you have some other mods you might recommend?
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Linux@lemmy.world•What distro should I use to revive this cutie over here?English
2·1 month agoAre the BSDs generally good/workable on older hardware, especially laptops? I don’t really have a clue (no knowledge beyond Linux) but if so it sounds like a nice use for an old laptop, as a learning tool.
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Books@lemmy.world•What book(s) are you currently reading or listening to? November 11English
1·1 month agoI read them earlier this year and absolutely loved the first one, especially its prose and somewhat meandering style.
Loved the other two a little less but still definitely enjoyed having read them, and now l wonder what else of hers to dive into!
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Linux@lemmy.world•What distro should I use to revive this cutie over here?English
2·1 month agoThere was recently another user asking the same for a similar machine on the .ml Linux comm.
As I did there, I can only tell you I successfully ran antix on a similarly old eee-pc from 2007ish, with the same CPU. It did have 1gb of ram though iirc, but the distro ran fairly comfortably (until it came to browsing with many tabs open).
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Linux@lemmy.world•What distro should I use to revive this cutie over here?English
2·1 month agoI don’t know for the other but tails doesn’t exist as a 32bit version, does it? I’m also not sure it would very comfortable on 512mb ram.
hoppolito@mander.xyzto
Fedigrow@lemmy.zip•Don't feel awkward about keeping a community aliveEnglish
111·1 month agoI think it’s completely fine. Honestly, I got the idea you were going for instantly, and a Reddit community - being generally way larger than fedi comms - is probably the best vehicle to drive it home.
Plus I don’t think it’s practical, nor useful, to turn Reddit into the place that shall not be named here. That would feel especially awkward with the outrage generated every time a mention of lemmy.world is taken down over there.


Luanti and Minecraft are two distinct, if similar-looking things.
Luanti is an open-source voxel game engine implementation which allows running a wide variety of different ‘games’ on it (including two which mimic Minecraft very closely, like the above-mentioned Mineclonia).
Minecraft is the closed-source game owned by Mojang.
The two don’t interact and servers for the one are completely unrelated to the other as well.
So, to answer the question - yes, they still need a Minecraft license if they want to play Minecraft. But this is disconnected from having a Luanti server, for which you don’t need any licenses but which will in turn also only allow you to play Luanti stuff, not Minecraft.