Hi, i’m into programming, sexual transmutation and psychedelics!

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • Exactly! I don’t see why we have to rely on the old internet infrastructure for a completely differently conceived type of distributing content!

    There’s stuff like ipfs, and I’m sure there are many ways to make self hosting easier…

    We normalize everyone has a modem/router/access point at home: we should normalize everyone having his own server hosted, bitcoin node, ipfs node etc etc…

    And your right, these services have to be super easy to deploy… I think containerization might be helping with this… Think about docker or Nixos… Make a nice GUI and simplify docker even more and you get packages that can run on any distro in any OS, that even a complete noob could spin up! Maybe paired with repos that host most of the self hostable stuff.

    But yeah I think the whole structure might be have to be rethought, from the way we host to the way we can connect to each other… We got to give everyone the possibility to decide which web they want to be part of, and federation definitely allows this!






  • Enough focus to read documentation.

    That’s really it. If your purpose is just self hosting learning bash could also be helpful. And yeah Linux would be a great choice.

    But mostly, if you want to self host an instance of Nextcloud correctly and without having to deal with too many unexpected things, you have to read the documentation and do not rush. Most self hosted stuff isn’t “install and use”, because you’ll be your own server manager, and everything requires attention to be managed.

    Docker or not docker you will have to deal with configuration, settings, requirements and updates.

    So understanding how to read the docs/search and open github issues and taking time to read everything would be the most important skill for me.

    Also writing down what you are doing would indeed be helpful too, in order not to lose track of what you’re doing on your server. (Check out Ansible).

    Most apps out there simply need you to know about permissions, systemctl services and package managers.

    Try to always find a specific package for your distro for everything you install (eg. .deb for Debian), and have strategies when this is not possible (aka using a Python venv when installing python programs).