[-] Glareascum@lemmy.ml 17 points 4 days ago

You know what? You're right. Here is the new link, I'll update the post and remove the repo on GitHub!

59
submitted 4 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by Glareascum@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

I've just started to take notes about the LPIC1 and LPIC2 certifications.

So I thought to share them to maybe help someone else. English is not my first language, so maybe you can just tell me what do you think and how to improve the structure / vocabary / markdown / everything else.

I'm about at 10% (I think) of the learning path (just finished topic 102.5), but I'll push new topics as soon as I read and summarize them.

Thank you!

[-] Glareascum@lemmy.ml 7 points 4 months ago

I'm about 4-5 years from where I started to self host things. I went through a raspberry, minipc and now I built a small rack where I have a custom built PC where I self host things. Is it a pain in the ass to start without anyone teaching you? YES. I spent a lot of time trying, testing, failing and retrying, but it was a nice trip, I learnt a ton of things and a lot of things I'll learn, I'm still definitively not an expert but I'm improving myself.

I tried (more than one time) nextcloud and I've definitively not liked it. I tried filebrowser which is more near to my use case, than I finished choosing a WebDAV instance using apache, it is perfect for my use-case, compatible with my windows job-pc and mounted perfectly from my LineageOS Android phone.

I've LineageOS without microG and any google thing at all; all I need is self hosted and available through a custom domain and/or through a VPN I self host. 90% of my apps are Foss.

My bank app works great without an official Android OS ( I didn't root my phone).

It's all about the amount of time you can invest through it:

  • A lot of time: learn about self host, try the available solutions and choose which one fit your use-case
  • Some time: find available solutions that don't require you to do anything (like proton drive, private nextcloud instances etc...)
  • No time: use Google.

If you need something, I have some free space on my server that you can use (don't trust me or anyone else, use it by thinking).

Don't give up!

[-] Glareascum@lemmy.ml 6 points 9 months ago

I'm using Addy.io for a year and I can't be more happy. Cheap and working

[-] Glareascum@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 year ago

I currently selfhost AdGuard Home and it works very efficiently. I added custom lists plus personal filters, and as a plus, I exposed the DoT on the web, so I can use the device I "authorized" no matter where I am. Big plus for me

[-] Glareascum@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

There are bunch of them. I preferred to start configuring those components by reading and trying to understanding how does the various configurations work. Then I took a look at the ricings I liked and started from them. For every piece of ricing, there is a default configuration where you can start to edit.

Neovim was the hardest to understand (and I'm sure I did something wrong or useless), and also for it there are a lot of useful resources on the web, I can't really raccomend one or another, but again, I avoided every video tutorial just because I prefer to read.

Start with one component and start ricing!

79
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Glareascum@lemmy.ml to c/unixporn@lemmy.ml

Just configured my working laptop. Spent a lot of hours to "learn" how various tools (polybar, kitty, nvim) works and how to configure them.

Nvim written from scratch, I tried to comment out the various files written in lua.

Based on colorscheme "nordic" from alexvzyl.

Dotfiles -> HERE

Glareascum

joined 2 years ago