nelson

bonapartists will be sunk

  • 4 Posts
  • 16 Comments
Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • nelsonOPtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldReverse proxy without a single point of failure
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    1 year ago

    I get it, and I’ve seen this response other places I’ve asked about this too. But a license agreement can just offer refunds for downtime, it doesn’t have to promise any specific amount of availability. For small, cheap, experimental subscription apps, that should be enough; it’s not like I’m planning on selling software to businesses or hosting anything that users would store critically important data in. The difference in cost between home servers and cloud hosting is MASSIVE. It’s the difference between being able to make a small profit on small monthly subscriptions, versus losing hundreds or thousands per month until subscriber numbers go up.

    (also fwiw this entire plan is dependent on getting fiber internet, which should be available in my area soon; without fiber it would be impractical to run something like this from home)














  • I’m surprised hardly anyone else has mentioned Wesnoth yet. I last played it over a decade ago, so I’m not sure if it’s still as well-known now as it used to be, but it’s one of the highest-quality open-source games out there.

    It’s a turn-based fantasy strategy game that feels like a combination of Advance Wars, Fire Emblem, and D&D. And I suppose it was a lot more unique back in the 2000’s when there weren’t a dozen indie games out there that fit the same description.




  • Hard to answer. Both games are huge, lots of content, and you’ll definitely be too tired of OT1 to go straight to OT2 after. And OT2 improves enough that it might be hard to go back to OT1 after.

    If you’re into JRPGs and know you’ll enjoy putting lots of hours into this style of game, get OT1 first and take a break in between before buying OT2. You’ll appreciate the changes more after playing the first, and they’re both good games.

    If you don’t want to spend that kind of time on an RPG but just want to see what the fuss is about, OT2 is still a great game on its own and you don’t need to know anything from OT1 to enjoy it.



  • I’ve had a private Matrix server for me and a few family members for years now. It doesn’t federate, and I’m afraid to try, because I run it on a potato computer and I’ve heard horror stories of Synapse federation consuming hundreds of gigabytes of space.

    It’s generally been stable and performant and really nice to use. The only problem is encryption: Element seems to forget keys sometimes and need to resync. And Matrix’s whole e2ee system is arcane nonsense to anyone who’s not extremely technical. Every time that happens, it’s a long tech support call.

    The solution is to just not use encryption on chatrooms, which is fine, but DMs have to be encrypted so it still comes up sometimes.