


If you're using it as a GCNAT tunnel and you don't want to use tailscale, then your best bet will likely be either a VPS or asking your ISP for a public IP address. Some ISPs will just say no, but others might provide one for an additional fee.
You can also look into your IPV6 situation. You might actually already have a public IPv6 address you can use.

You don't say what you're using Cloudflare for, so suggesting an alternative is a bit tough.
Assuming that you're using a CF tunnel to get through CGNAT, tailscale would be one alternative (no need to turn it off/on, though). The other alternative would be renting a cheap VPS and tunneling through that instead.
On the other hand, if you're primarily using CF as a reverse proxy, you can run any number of them on your own server instead, like Nginx, Zoraxy, etc.
On the other other hand, if you're using their WAF, that can also be run locally. Crowdsec offers a WAF component in addition to their usual protections, for example.
On the other other other hand.... There are alternatives to most, if not all, of their other services, too.

For what it's worth, I changed both usernames and it worked.

Nerd blogs, a couple message boards and Reddit subs, and XKCD, of course.

Bug report is getting a little spicy.

There are some tools to help, but things are sort of specific to particular aspects. Lynis for general systems, ntopng for networks, and such.
For 90% of stuff, though, you can just stick to stable repos and upgrade on a schedule and you'll be alright.

What's a good reverse proxy for a set up using Cloudflare?
Having a reverse proxy behind your reverse proxy is a little redundant, but should work fine. My preference after trying several was nginx. The config takes a little to get used to, but it has a ton of features.
is Cloudflare's proxy really needed?
Not at all.
Cloudflare just makes configuration a bit easier, especially if you're behind CGNAT. I wrote a little about them here: https://blog.k3can.us/index.php?post/2025/02/Cloudflare-for-the-Selfhoster

The paid plans get you the "premium" blocklists, which includes one specially made to prevent AI scrapers, but a free account will still get you the actual software, the community blocklist, plus up to three "basic"lists.

The slightly lower power draw pi5 vs a Tiny will eventually make up for the higher initial cost, but you can save more by turning off lights when you leave a room or skipping a round at the bar.
In my opinion, the wider software compatibility, better processing power, and expansible RAM and storage options far outweigh the eventual theoretical savings.
That said, if you need the super small SBC form factor or GPIO pins, definitely go for a pi. They absolutely have their use cases. I have 4 or 5 of the 3B and 3B+, and have used them on-and-off for a variety of tasks over the years.

It's been a long time since Pi's were competitive on price.
You can get a used Lenovo Thinkcentre for $50 on eBay. A modern pi is going to cost you that much for just the board, then you still need to buy a case, power supply, SD card, and then figure out some solution for storage...

Whoa. TIL!
I thought Mandrake/Mandriva died over a decade ago, I had no idea it was still kicking around!

No reason to bother with a Pi unless you need the GPIO for something. You can do more with a Lenovo Tiny or SFF Dell.

I fell for the Ready 100 Computer, years ago and now I don't trust anything computer related on Kickstarter.

Host? As in running services?
Wireguard and the Proxmox Backup Server software itself. Redundancy/failover comes from the server cluster itself, not my backup server.
As far as the backup content, it "hosts" backup images of my VMs and LXCs, plus /home
from my laptop in case it ever gets lost or damaged.

I tried a bunch, zoneminder, motioneye, frigate, etc., before finally settling in AgentDVR. It offers a fair bit of flexibility via MQTT and "just worked" with my PTZ camera.

Good to know.
I have seen damage to older monochrome displays before (from the 90s) but I don't know how they differed from what ICOM used in the 7100. Obviously things had improved in those 20 years. But since monochrome LCDs are somewhat rare in consumer goods nowadays, I don't have much experience with more modern variants.

IC7100 - Potential burn-in concerns?
I'm considering leaving my IC7100 on throughout the day, but I'm concerned about whether the screen might develop any sort of burn-in from displaying the same image for such a long time.
Can anyone with an IC 7100 chime in on whether they've experienced any display issues from leaving the radio on for a long period of time?
Thanks!
Permanently Deleted

Under the store page there should be a "steam replay" button if you scroll down a bit. It will only show the OS break down if you use more than one OS, though. No pi chart if you only game on Linux. 😕

AMD has been great on Linux.
I'm curious about Intel's cards, though. They seem to be offering some solid competition now, but I haven't heard anything about their Linux support.

Same. I don't remember paying for it, but I know donated through the Reddit version, so it would make sense that I would have also purchased the lemmy version if I was given the option.
I just like using Boost because I can have the exact same interface between both Reddit and Lemmy. The Reddit version was removed from the Play store, though, so I needed to side-load it when I switched to this new phone. Still works, though.