Have backups, follow the 3-2-1 rule.
All drives fail, at any time, and you will eventually lose data if you don’t have good backups in place.
Have backups, follow the 3-2-1 rule.
All drives fail, at any time, and you will eventually lose data if you don’t have good backups in place.
Prusa if you want to buy something ready to go.
Voron if you want to build something from a kit.
And for a cheap starter printer the basic Ender 3 and variants are good.
Since you’re using a non-standard HTTPS port, check your browser network log in dev tools and make sure your app isn’t redirecting you to the standard port 443. With non-standard ports you often will need to customize the config of apps so they know what you’re using.
Maybe your ISP has you on CGNAT? If your public IP is between 100.64.0.0 and 100.127.255.255
you’re on CGNAT.
Closest thing I know of is Wordpress with a static site export plugin.
There are static site generators like Hugo but they are not a drag and drop editor.
They have full access to the hardware, everything on it, and all traffic going to/from it. So you need to trust the provider you use somewhat.
If you just want privacy from the usual online services by running some of your own stuff, then that’s totally fine.
Its pretty likely to be the case, using tor makes you stand out significantly.
It definitely can have a big impact, especially if the old nozzle wasn’t quite flat or smooth at the tip. Or if it was just worn out from lots of use.
It works ok, I don’t use it much because its a web app, so doing stuff like opening a 6000 line CSV file when I was migrating our CRM software caused it to crash/hang, or large word documents can cause it to slow down a ton.
But as a basic editor for small documents it works fine, if a bit laggy feeling for my tastes.
Vent system would be important IMO. One option is a 4" duct with an inline fan, put the printer and wash stations in a box or vent hood of some kind and vent that outside.
Yeah the first run experience really needs to be tweaked so it’s a normal window.
I would go with a managed Nextcloud provider, it’s such a pain to manage self hosting Nextcloud specifically.
Be extra vigilant with your backups though, free stuff always has a higher chance of weird stuff happening, once they just removed my VPS after my trial ended and told me to re-create it.
Dynamic DNS is free generally, for example if you put your domain on Cloudflare or another DNS host with an API that is supported you can just update the A records automatically on IP change.
There isn’t one.
You can combine several other services though, such as Matrix for chat, Mumble or Teamspeak for voice, and OBS + BroadcastBox for game streaming.
My own usage is like 20-30GB in my experience (not including the OS and system stuff). So I’d say 128GB since the OS these days uses a ton of space.
My ebooks all live on my kindle, but they really don’t use much space at all either way.
If I needed to store stuff like games or something I’d just use a flash drive or portable SSD, much cheaper than buying a phone with more storage.
I only backup important stuff that I can’t replace, so photos and videos I’ve taken, documents, etc… So far about 1.5TB of space used by that.
Media and other stuff I downloaded online doesn’t get backed up, it’s not important and can be replaced.
HDMI should auto-detect the best supported output automatically, is it not doing that?
No but people use it because it’s pleasant and easy to use with a nice UI, lots of features for stickers and sharing content, etc…
Having encryption and being ‘secure’ is not what will get most people to switch from Discord and Telegram, having the same features and doing it even better will.
TBH I’m still using Onenote, I haven’t found a good replacement for it.