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Joined 7 months ago
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Cake day: June 5th, 2025

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  • Ive been using AirVPN since Mullvad dropped port forwarding and it has been decent and reasonably priced. The only issue I’ve had was with their “Eddie” client for Windows. I fixed this by using (I think, or something similarly named) WireSock with an AirVPN Wireguard config which also gave me the ability to do split tunneling easily but I only used this for a few months before building a new server running Proxmox

    I think ProtonVPN also has the feature but costs a bit more. Private Internet Access is another cheap option but their owners are shady (I had them before Mullvad until they got sold to a company with ties to Israeli spyware makers IIRC)



  • As someone with no PS experience or other baggage weighing me down, I find the default UI to be insanely unintuitive. Im not even sure what the panels on the right or bottom are for, the left toolbar panel randomly disappears on me occasionally and I can never figure out how to get it back without closing and reopening GIMP. Things like Crop don’t seem to do anything obvious. Painting with the brush doesn’t work unless you first use the selection tool to draw a box around the area you want to use the brush. Etc, etc, etc. Some of this is obviously just because I’m a novice, and I manage to fumble my way through things, but at the same time it could be drastically simplified for simple tasks. It feels like a tool that was built for people who already knew how to use it.





  • Note that opening a port gives full access to that port to the next higher Network. Opening a port directly to the Internet is therefore insecure and not recommended.

    It says so right there.

    There are multiple ways of exposing Jellyfin to the outside - the most common ones are:

    forwarding its Ports directly to the internet (not recommended!)

    forwarding through a Reverse Proxy

    using a VPN connection to enter the Network

    use a VPS to Reverse Proxy to your home network

    And there.

    This smug mentality that security is unnecessary when exposing ports to the open internet reminds me of people who think its fine to drive drunk because “I’ve done it dozens of times before and nothing happened!” It also reminds me of the mentality of tech company VPs right before they have a massive data breach. It’s quite absurd to read.







  • The third alternative (and best IMO) is to buy a PC case with lots of drive slots and transfer everything into it. With a NAS you’re going to pay a ton of money for the NAS itself which is just laptop-equivalent hardware and a fixed number of drive bays meaning you can’t expand it when it fills up without buying more expensive hardware, and you’ll also be forced into buying matched drives. With an HDD enclosure, you’re spending less money but again fixed on the number of drives while also being somewhat unreliable due to the USB connection.

    I use a Fractal Design Define 6 midtower case which can hold around 12 HDDs. For hardware I bought a mobo with the most SATA ports I could get and began slowly buying drives as my storage pool filled up, eventually needing an LSI HBA card to expand the number of SATA connections. This is the best value IMO as the cost is comparable to buying a NAS, you can add drives as you go with a much higher drive capacity, the connection is rock solid, and you can run real PC hardware.


  • It was definitely not fun stringing Cat6 through the attic, but knowing myself, I probably wouldn’t have stayed on top of battery changes and I also wanted 24/7 recording since a battery powered camera can miss movement and start recording late or not at all. I also need a doorbell camera still but I’ve had trouble finding one that checks all the boxes.