Fully local nameservice
I'm finally starting to install local web apps that my wife/kids would be interested in, and I know it has to be super easy or they're never going to go near it. Most everything is running on my Synology on different ports, with absolutely nothing exposed to the outside world, and I'd like to run local DNS and proxy so everything is available LAN-only with an easy hostname - plex.local, paperless.local, etc. (If we want remote access I'll just run Tailscale.) I'm already running PiHole, and I'm assuming if I poke around I can add local names in there, but has anybody else that's done this have any suggestions for setting things up?
only for people who like to tinker and customize so wouldn’t necessarily recommend here
I seriously cannot tell if this is sarcasm
Seconding Migadu! I’ve had them for about 3 years now and never had a problem.
Well I’ll be goddamned… I guess I wouldn’t download a car.
I’m a pretty big fan of Craft - it has the slight problem a lot of similar types of editors do, where it handles a lot of different content types so the text handling can be weird at times, but overall it has a great interface, supports sharing with non-paid accounts, and generally felt worth paying for for me.
Cool! Definitely post that if you come across it.
That river looks reasonably clear (as rivers go) - under normal circumstances, can you look over and see the old highway when you’re driving next to it?
It’s been a bit so I may botch some of the details, but back when they were just a playing card company, the youngish CEO went to the US and toured the offices of whoever the biggest playing card manufacturer was at that time. He noticed their offices weren’t that impressive and thought, “If we remain as a playing card company, this is our ceiling.” So he started branching out into a ton of weird unrelated businesses and video games happened to stick.
So basically thank Hoyle or whoever for having a shitty headquarters or we wouldn’t have Tears of the Kingdom.
Zuck's gonna tear him apart; he's got that android strength.
Rice, tuna from a packet, and soy sauce - cheap, delicious, healthy, and easy. You wanna get fancy, you can add some sesame oil, furikake, chop up some green onions, whatever you got kicking around.
About a decade ago I was completely burned out at my programming job. I started taking night classes in graphic design since it felt like the exact opposite of computer programming, and ended up really loving it. I met a bunch of new people, designed a few things for people on the side, and ended up getting enough energy & momentum to quit my shitty job and freelance for a few years.