Nah, I'm good. I'm fine with services being limited to what information they can convince my browser to give them, rather than what they can convince my phone to give them. Or try and convince me to give them permission to access.
Absolutely not. And they can fuck right off with that whole needing an account to use a terminal thing.
I like it. Everyone these days seems to want web pages that are 5MB of dynamically generated junk.
My little website is just static hugo-generated stuff.
Annnnd that ended any curiosity at all I may have had for it...
Any time I've ever had a server of any kind connected to the net it's gotten endless 'doorknob turning' from bots scanning for stuff. At the very least, bots trying ssh passwords on common accounts.
I don't have any specific jellyfin advice, but random attempts from all over is pretty usual on the net these days.
Mint is my go-to linux newbie distro suggestion.
Found in a time capsule in 2150: hey guys, we left you a little something over there by Vesuvius...you'll thank us later. And you better not have built a McDonald's on it...
Thumbs up for announcing it's creation so we can pre-emptively block it though.
"States have a right to decide on issues!"
"Not like that though!"
Command line is a lot more powerful for a lot of cases. Most CLI programs are written with the idea that the caller might be another program, so they tend to be easy to chain with pipes and redirection. So you have tons of simple tools that you can combine however you need.
A terminal that uses Electron? Hah, no...not a chance. I'll stick with wezterm.
Ah yes, the update nobody actually wants...