

For that, you’ll need to either have it behind a reverse proxy and port forward appropriately that way, or port forward directly to the IP address you’re using now.
For that, you’ll need to either have it behind a reverse proxy and port forward appropriately that way, or port forward directly to the IP address you’re using now.
Being able to manage it through a gui web interface is definitely nice. I love how simple it is to work with.
Is the IP address you’re trying to connect to correct? It’ll either be one assigned by Docker, or it’ll just the the IP address of your host machine.
On your Ubuntu host, type “ip addr” (no quotes) in the terminal and try that address. If you have not configured the Ubuntu host’s IP address to be statically assigned, or set up a DHCP reservation for that address you should do that as well so the address doesn’t change in the future.
I was fully unaware of the tab swiping feature on android, and I’ve been using firefox forever. That’s so useful, oh my god.
I’ve used a fair number of them from Amazon, they all have worked in any browser. I think I might have had to manually specify http and not https for setup though.
If you don’t plan on having it save passwords, you can add the following to the .desktop file your using for the Exec line:
–password-store=basic
The line for my chrome setup for some public computers at work is:
Exec=/usr/bin/google-chrome-stable --password-store=basic %U
So you’d just need to replace the file path to your chromium path and it should work.
Do you have any client recommendations? I’ve tried Kavita and I liked the web app, but having a dedicated 2-way syncing client would be nice!
DisplayPort out to HDMI in is generally easy to adapt with a cheap passive adapter, but going the other way is a huge pain.
Right click gives the same menu immediately!
Mmwave is available on many more devices than just iPhones. Most flagship phones have it, including older ones like the Pixel 7 pro.
I’m using Zoho. It’s pretty cheap and wasn’t hard to set up with my domain.
On the positive side, if your vaultwarden server dies, the cached vault on any/all of your devices can be logged into and export the vault.
Framework is amazing (I have a 7840u 13in) but they’re expensive. 100% worth it to me as an enthusiast and IT professional but possibly not for someone less interested in the tech itself.
Why would your Jellyfin traffic need to go over the Internet if it’s on your local network? You should be able to install the Jellyfin app on your smart TV/Roku/etc or use the web client from a computer, point it at the Jellyfin local IP address, and view it over your LAN.
There’s one in Minneapolis too!
It makes me think of Enterprise, where they don’t have replicators but they do have protein resequencers, which can take waste matter and convert it into useful things, but they can’t do energy to matter conversion yet.