

I never felt the need. What does such a solution actually do?


I never felt the need. What does such a solution actually do?


sum the time used per day
Once when I was young, I have tried this, too. It turned out that all days used 24 hours, more or less exactly. After a while I found it too boring and let it be…
/s


My main concern here, in addition to everything in option 2, is that ZFS needs a lot of memory for caching. Right now I can dedicate 4 GB to it, which is less than the recommendation – is it responsible to run a ZFS pool with that?
Yes, you’re going to be OK.
In your typical “self hosting” scenarios you can safely stay well below the RAM recommendation - assuming you don’t have many simultaneous users and tasks.
ZFS does not actually need that much RAM for basic operation, but it can make very good use of it in medium/heavy load scenarios.
I have found these 2 smb clients working.
https://f-droid.org/packages/com.wa2c.android.cifsdocumentsprovider
https://f-droid.org/packages/de.schliweb.sambalite
And good ol’ ghost commander too, like everybody here :)


I have tried out Openclaw in a container, and it wasn’t hard at all.
All the warnings of danger are right, though. But if anything goes wild, I still know how to delete a container :-)


Some kind of time switch to make the router reboot at regular intervals. Then hope that this prevents the factory reset.


provide factory-recertified drives
Recertified drives are like used cars with odometers reset to zero.
What kind of idiot would buy them?


It’s OK, Sheldon.


When my phone is connected to my WiFi, it uses my local dns. When outside my home it uses public dns
You don’t need ‘split dns’ whatever that is.
This is split dns 😉


No.
My question is: How can I avoid that my android devices bypass my DNS?


How?


android devices bypassing local DNS
Can this be fixed/avoided?
…and their SAAS version is a terrible pain to use


Why do some people advertise their things only as “alternative to”?
I don’t know that other thing. So what is your thing?


How many domains do you own when you try to set up so many DNS servers?


That’s the stuff where we lose out to corporate products.
They sometimes lose things as well.
And they harrass their users in other ways, for example by randomly renaming stuff to “AI…” or even integrating with AI.


I had intended to try it out, but now uninstalled for… just in case.
Some kind guru please watch the source for unwanted effects.


Just like not every Linux user compiles from source, but they’re still Linux users.
Yes. In theory.
But in practise, this is the one great unsolved mystery of Linux.
And maybe self hosting has a similar one.


That’s what you get when you let go hundreds of employees
OK but then… what happens when their boss jerk fires hundreds of thousands?
Right into the browsers? Into all browsers on all devices?