[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 26 points 1 year ago

I have alway been wondering who are actually drawing all these pictures.

That’s a awful lot of money to commission an artist to make all these shitposts.

[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago
[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago

Okay I am very confused… where are these characters from? Sorry for my ignorance.

[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago

It’s 12V so I guess you can Frankenstein something with a car battery. But honestly this sounds more like a LTT video than something I would trust not to burn my house down.

[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Yep I’m looking at system76. Not sure about how valid the 14h battery life claim is though. That seems awfully optimistic on a 10-core Intel chip.

[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

Some addition power management tools I suppose?

[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

That’s new info for me thanks. Never knew thinkpad can excel in this department.

67
submitted 1 year ago by OmltCat@lemmy.world to c/linux@lemmy.ml

I will need to get a laptop in the foreseeable future, and I really want to stick to Linux. However, I may need to be out-of-home for 12+ hours straight in a day. After some research, it seems people are generally not that impressed with battery life on Linux?

The laptop does not need to do anything heavy duty, as I will remote back into my already very beefy desktop back home.

I guess a common solution to this light use case is M2 MacBook if one wants to completely throw battery concern out of the window. Well... let's just say it's a love-hate relationship.

[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago

Things you mentioned about windows before “etc” can actually be disabled through group policy or other means. It’s an annoyance nonetheless. But after ~30 minutes of tweaking after a new install, windows is not that bad these days.

Anyway, if I don’t play games I’ll probably be Linux all the way. Most things today are web based anyway.

But how is gaming on Linux nowadays, if you may elaborate? I have top of the line hardwares but the games I play easily max out their usage. I know there are things like translation layer, but I’m afraid the performance hit may be not ideal…

[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

Yea that’s basically the reason why I can’t use a VPN.

In fact there isn’t really a problem to leave your phone connected to the selfhosted VPN all the time. If split tunneling works properly, only traffic that access your home network would actually go through the VPN, all others will just get bypassed.

But in my case, I already need to be connected to another VPN most of my day, so can’t really go this route.

[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago

Well I’m trying to discuss when unable to use a VPN so….

[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Limited container access is a good point. Noted.

I think the APP itself is fine, but would an API access give attackers a mean to brute force into it? Sorry no expert here.

The official wiki talks about securing password login with fail2ban. I guess this is not needed in my case, as it’s handled at the Authelia level.

[-] OmltCat@lemmy.world 76 points 1 year ago

Because it’s “quick start”. Least effort to get a taste of it. For actual deployment I would use compose as well.

Many project also have a example docker-compose.yml in the repository if you dig not so deep into it

There is https://www.composerize.com to convert run command to compose. Works ~80% of the time.

I honestly don’t understand why anyone would make “curl and bash” the officially installation method these days, with docker around. Unless this is the ONLY thing you install on the system, so many things can go wrong.

85

I see a lot of people here uses some form of remote access tool (VPN/Tailscale) to access their home network when not at home. I can’t really do this because my phone (iOS) can only activate one VPN profile at a time, and I often need this for other stuff.

So I chose to expose most web based services on the public internet, behind Authelia. But I don’t know how safe this is.

What I’m really unsure are things like Vaultwarden: while the web interface is protected by Authelia (even use 2FA), its API address needs to be bypassed for direct access, otherwise the mobile APP won’t work. It feels like this is negative everything I’ve done so far.

35

Since over 90% percent of the time I’m on a personal device, I would rather have this on by default, and only specifically uncheck if I’m on a public device.

Yea it only takes a second to check it, but another annoyance is that iOS would only show the big blue button to auto fill when you first load the page. After any interaction, it’s gone.

I’m not sure if there is an Authelia setting that I’m unaware of. I looked through the online doc and couldn’t find anything about this.

Thanks!

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OmltCat

joined 1 year ago