

You can pass your browser’s cookies to yt-dlp. Try that, maybe?
I think it’s
yt-dlp --cookies-from-browser firefox
But please check in the documentation. Also, your browser needs to in the PATH.
You can pass your browser’s cookies to yt-dlp. Try that, maybe?
I think it’s
yt-dlp --cookies-from-browser firefox
But please check in the documentation. Also, your browser needs to in the PATH.
I really want to try this, now.
If your ISP blocks port forwarding, this guide can help.
I have been using Mullvad Extended for a long time. It is great, but does have many false positives. They sometimes block some Indian government domains.
I would say DoT is more than fine. Here are their official instructions.
This guide can you help you expose your services in a relatively safe way.
Thanks! I will definitely look into it.
My app is nothing compared to the features Open WebUI. I just wanted to make a simple native app. Honestly, I made this just because I wanted to see if I can make something like that.
Also, Open WebUI is slightly complex for someone who is not into self-hosting. My app is for someone who just installs Ollama on their laptop or any computer and has exposed it to on the local network.
That’s odd. I did test it on Mint.
Can you run it via a terminal and tell me if it shows any errors?
If setting up official docker container looks hard, check out linuxserver.io’s docker container for Jellyfin. Even HWA is very easy.
I have used an old MacBook Air as a home server with Fedora for about 2 years. Fedora with Podman can be great, especially when you can use Cockpit (a GUI for managing containers), which is pre-installed and perfectly integrated.
Another option is to use TrueNAS. I can also recommend OpenMediaVault.
For exposing your services on the internet I suggest caution. If your ISP does not let you forward your ports, you can read this. https://blog.aiquiral.me/bypass-cgnat
This is c/opensource
Logseq is a good alternative.
Oh wow. That’s cool. By the way, does the game support Dualsense’s adaptive triggers?
Edit - Yes, it does. (Source)
I use this site. Not all games work, though.
Another option is to use 1337x and search for jc141. They put either native linux game or sometimes have wine built-in their setups, but they require you to install a lot of prerequisites.
Another option is to use emulators like PCSX2 or RPCS3 to play other games with relatively less hassle.
The f-droid team goes through the source code and builds the app themselves before publishing. I think it’s better to trust them. Obtanium is great, but only if the app is not on f-droid or f-droid is lagging behind updates.
That is not ideal, especially if you will be the only one using it. If you are using it alone, YouTube will still be able to profile you, as all the videos will be watched by a single server. It would be just like using YouTube.com with a VPN. If you are self-hosting and a few people will use it, YouTube won’t be able to profile everyone, as it will think all the videos are being watched by a single person.
This is perfect!
How’s your experience with Moonshine / Sunshine? Latency on local network?
I use Nobara on my laptop which has rtx 3060 6gb with ryzen 7 5800h. Sure Nvidia sucks on every linux distro, but you will get many quality of life improvements when using linux instead of windows.
Btw, Nobara is just Fedora with some good gaming related chages.