Just got rid of my Reddit account including all my content.
Neither do I see any advantage in using it anyways nor do I support their upcoming changes in API pricing.
Screw Reddit!
Just got rid of my Reddit account including all my content.
Neither do I see any advantage in using it anyways nor do I support their upcoming changes in API pricing.
Screw Reddit!
Just a short follow-up to the Hetzner - Jitsi - story below.
Started exploring the usage of hcloud
to compress the full setup down to a single command (presupposed that IPv4/IPv6 already exist and have proper A/AAAA-records attached).
Well, it works flawless :-)
Create a local cloud-init.yaml
file and fill it with the #cloud-config stuff down below in the article.
Get yourself the hcloud
tool and run:
hcloud server create --datacenter 4 --image jitsi --name jitsi \
--type cax11 --user-data-from-file cloud-init.yaml \
--primary-ipv4 121345678 --primary-ipv6 12345679
Replace the server type
and datacenter
with something appropriate for the intended size and location of your meeting.
Use hcloud primary-ip list
to get the IDs.
Once your meeting is done you can get rid of the server with hcloud as well:
hcloud server delete 12345678
You can grab the ID of the server via hcloud server list
or you are smarter than me and remembered the ID from the output of the create
command.
Next setup would be the automated setup of an RTMP server to allow recording…
Recently the so called BigBrotherAwards have been awarded. In the pool of winners this year were also the well known Zoom video conference tool. This made me thinking, because the Armbian project uses Zoom for their weekly developer meetups.
So I decided to invest a bit of time to explore if it would be possible to deploy a self-hosted Jitsi video-conference server on a Hetzner cloud server on demand, without much configuration needed. And this is what I came up with.
Continue readingWelp, in theory at least I planned to make a review about the Orange Pi 5 but still could not find proper mood to do so…
I may post a review of a very recent single board computer soon.
Pushed a small fix to the Nextcloud NGINX config.proxy_pass
should be http
instead of https
.
I really do enjoy the service of snipboard.io. It is straight forward, very easy and convenient to use and independent from operating system. Unfortunately it is closed source and I really wanted to have something similar as a self-hosted service.
The closest I could come up with to get something like or even more convenient was a combination of xbackbone on server-side and Shutter as client tool.
Continue reading