team fortress 2, 3100 legion td2, 750 cyberpunk 2077, 680
Marty_TF
The blessing of selhosting
Your pursuit for digital soverignity has come to an end
- Server maintenance: lose one bonus action per round
- Media server of pirated movies: gain one random spell roll at the start of your turn when in combat
- Tales of docker: Frighten a creature for 2 rounds, but lose 1 Charisma for 10 rounds
- Tailscale: spend an action point to access your camp chest from anywhere
im replaying the game in vr rn, usinf luke ross real vr mod. it bringsnonly barebones vr capabilities, you still need kbm or controller, but honestly, the open world complaint simply disintegrates in vr. a world this perfectly crafted is simply a joy in vr. since vr is generally slower, the dialogue parts also feel way less slow and tedious, and when modded appropriately difficult, you really start roleplaying to your charavters strength. starting off as a weak ass meatbag, having to stealth everything, chroming up more and more to the point where you go from dying in 4 shots to being able to go beserk bring a real sense of progression to it. currently modding via the new nexus app, as vortex doesnt work on linux, so i cant make a collection yet, but once i have it, i will definitely share it. i have 680 hours rn, 300 of them in vr (120ish i the current run) and i'm enjoying every minute of it
have you tried using a vpn, e.g. tailscale?
extremely easy to set up, if you are a selfhost purist, there's headscale as a direct alternative.
only really good at doing stuff in a personal workspace, not really made for exposing to the public internet, still very possible tho
kubuntu 2 years windows 10 2 years Ubuntu 1 month kubuntu 2 years fedora 2 years everything for about a month fedora for a year arch since february
i selfhost navidrome and use feishin on linux desktop, and symfonium on mobile.
code: null, nada, nothing. dunno how issues: maybe 30 in 9 years using gnu/linux money: 1% of my income for 5 years now, to whatever project i find cool, mostly smaller ones tho
btop and zfxtop are rather fancy, maybe they might be what ur looking for
yoooo thanks for this. this one is extremely well made.
how do i find a reason to love the nextcloud community more and more every single day?!?
im a gardener. some apprentice who has never owned a computer, not bcs they couldnt afford it, but bcs due to mobile phones there simply is no need for it, asked me how to shut down a computer. not kidding. it wasnt even some obscure gnu/linux distro, it was bog-standard windows 10.
nowadays, might be worth looking into nix flakes
tons of super performant nextcloud flakes being uploaded to github, difficulty is understanding nix, but it's worth it