scaredofplanes

joined 2 years ago
[–] scaredofplanes 12 points 2 years ago

Agreed. But I have been enjoying trying out some different Lemmy apps. Liftoff is pretty good! But there's nothing yet that sway me from Sync.

[–] scaredofplanes 2 points 2 years ago

Also Season to Risk - Mine Eyes

[–] scaredofplanes 3 points 2 years ago

Perfect deal. Leaves an absolutely tiny amount of cap space after ltir. We weren't going to accrue more cap no matter what. And the term is perfect. Briesbois has made it clear that if you perform you can have a long deal, otherwise you have time to prove that you can. Also, fuck picks. Picks are stupid

[–] scaredofplanes 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Thanks! I had no idea that was out there. The only mod I've done on my Q5 is to greatly exceed the weight rating of the roof rack but I've used Auto on some other cars and I really like it.

Your car looks great!

[–] scaredofplanes 3 points 2 years ago (3 children)

Wait, you added Android Auto? It works with MMI?

[–] scaredofplanes 2 points 2 years ago

Yeah, any solution is going to require at least egress rules for its traffic. Tailscale is a bit different since part of what it's able to do is provide access to your LAN, if desired. Cloudflare just needs two ports, but it's only providing a tunnel from the host.

[–] scaredofplanes 3 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Essentially it IS a tunnel, just with cloudflare's infrastructure in the middle handling auth and obscuring each end from the other.

Auth is handled by cloudflare. That doesn't mean cloudflare necessarily is the auth provider, though. Not likely in selfhosted, but one could set up some other auth provider, like azure, and cloudflare could give tunnel access to authorized users who actually provided credentials via azure.

The service, port, whatever being accessed via the tunnel may also require auth, and cloudflare generally doesn't handle that. For example, your cloudflare tunnel to your local sonarr instance requires auth at cloudflare first, to access the tunnel, then again at sonarr because your sonarr instance requires authentication.

In a docker environment, you would either tunnel to the docker host or to individual Dockers. The latter is more sensible and generally a bit more secure, if only because least access = better. There's probably some cloudflare tunnels docker out there that does half the setup for you, then you just stick it and the Dockers you want exposed through the tunnel all on the same docker network interface (which you create), but that's just speculation.

As far as setting tunnels up goes, the docs are really good at the step by step. Easiest way to learn it is to set up a VM similar to what you want and bang away at the steps until it does what you want. Some things are easy, like RDP. Other things are trickier.

The basics of setup are that you use the cloudflared application at both ends: one server-side to expose what you want and one client-side to access the tunnel via cloudflare.

Tailscale is the same kinda thing. I think it is way easier for a lot of people. There's a lot less setup involved. Just install the apps and make a few choices.

For personal use, I use wireguard to access my home server. Professionally I use cloudflare tunnels for a couple of things, but mostly an enterprise vpn.

[–] scaredofplanes 1 points 2 years ago

Second time in Glasnow's career he's had a 4K inning: https://twitter.com/RaysBaseball/status/1677453746173820930?t=7oQh8G0D1wB9INLK8oGP9Q&s=01

Sorry for the Twitter link.

[–] scaredofplanes 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

What client do you like?

[–] scaredofplanes 4 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Have you read any? I haven't, but I love adding these lists to my lists and then not remembering anything about them later on.

[–] scaredofplanes 6 points 2 years ago (3 children)

I have a server stood up for a couple years, and I keep it updated. But I'm still day to day on Plex for waf and for downloads, which have always worked for me. I try to keep up with jellyfin but I think I'm behind on development. For those of you who are daily drivers, how's it going?

[–] scaredofplanes 2 points 2 years ago

Patty was here when we needed him most. After 2019, it was Patty and Shatty who knew the guys needed to get the fuck over it. Sweden was their opportunity to impress that on the boys and it's truly because of them that they pulled their chins up and got it done.

2019 team could have been the one. But they just weren't prepared for the keep-pouring-goals offense to have an answer. Columbus was the answer. But a bunch of playoff teams that year could have done that to us. They thought every problem got solved by getting across the blue line, and that's not how it works.

2020 Patty showed up, fresh off a Cup, and he knew something no one else there really understood: you go out and due every shift, and then you do it again. With enough talent, it'll work.

I was ready to not play him anymore. But I'm forever grateful for what he brought us. This guy's a winner. Coop was right. He'll just keep going until he wins or there's a buzzer. And his stick handling is underrated. Bye, Patty. And thanks for everything.

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