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Joined 6 months ago
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Cake day: June 9th, 2024

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  • I would like to use tailscale for some services, but the ones I access from public computers, like nextcloud or blog hosting, can’t be behind a VPN.

    I would love the Synology to Synology backup to be behind the VPN, but I’m not sure I’ll be able to get it working, so that is lower down on my list.

    Things like Jitsi would be cool to have behind the vpn, but then I’d have to get everyone to install tailscale on their phones and configure access, so that’s going to be too complicated for me and my family unfortunately.





  • From reading the comments, I think you could be a lot leaner by selling the $100 setup fee, and telling people which “kit” is supported, and they buy that on their own.

    That way you don’t have to deal with any of the physical infrastructure of buying/selling/storing hardware, and people can do some customization.

    However I do think you’d need to put some restrictions in place so that people don’t buy cheap crap that doesn’t work and expect you to set it up and support it. They have to buy the kit or other compatible hardware.

    I’m not sure what services you’d support, but personally I’d be interested in something like a personal introduction and setup of

    • docker
    • proxmox
    • yunohost
    • backups / restore (practice restoring)
    • smb shared folder
    • pihole / pivpn (can you have wire guard and openvpn setup at the same time for different uses?

    Maybe migration of

    • nextcloud

    You could make different prices depending on what service they want, kind of like a bike stop.

    I wouldn’t want a perpetual subscription, but I could stomach something like $100 setup + $5/mo for limited support for a year.

    Best thing for me is that community support also exists for all these things too, but it’s hard to do it on your own sometimes.



  • It’s a Sony TV, a Bravia model from many years ago. It runs on a raspberry pi 2, connected with HDMI. There is a setting called CEC (if I remember correctly) that was automatically enabled, and lets the TV remote’s commands pass thru to the RPI over the HDMI cable. Should work for most TVs, but if you use an HDMI to DisplayPort/usbC adapter, some of those might not work right.

    I hope you can try it out because it’s very convenient as a user. And as the administrator you can still connect a mouse/keyboard or use a smartphone to configure the more powerful things Kodi can do.