[-] krash@lemmy.ml 1 points 6 hours ago

I enjoyed the beginning of Raised by wolves, but once it started to get "creative" (the levitating offspring...) I lost interest. Which is a shame because this was a high quality series.

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 50 points 2 months ago

Some are forced to use windows due to workplace requirements or software only running on windows. I run linux everywhere I can, but don't always have the choice.

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 19 points 6 months ago

Osthyvel (a cheese slicer). I kinda miss it every time I'm on vacation and I have no means to get the expected thickness of a cheese slice.

This is the epitome of first world problems.

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 27 points 7 months ago

If I want a simple chat protocol, I use IRC or XMPP. These are battle proven by time. If I want a really secure protocol, I use Signal or Matrix. These are endored by many security experts who their shit when they assess protocols, crypto and solutions.

SimpleX may be a good alternative for anonymous communication, but there is plenty options out there. Considering how many startups are funded by cheap VC money, and the business model is always "provide something awesome, and once you have enough traction - enshittify it" makes me very weary of investing myself in new solutions no matter how open-source the are.

I may sound bitter and skeptic, but I've seen this pattern has been repeated many times over.

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 25 points 7 months ago

Don't see why you're being downvoted, the person in question who discovered this is a postgres maintainer employed by Microsoft.

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 19 points 7 months ago

Thank you for the detailed reply and the explanations to (mostly) all the jargon :-)

Sweden is also doing a lot of deprecation of old telephony systems, those that I know of is that 2G and 3G are going away by 2025.

The less tech debt we pass onto future generations, the better.

20
submitted 9 months ago by krash@lemmy.ml to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

I've seen a lot of posts for a lot of different homepage for selfhosters: homepage, homer, homarr (which has an 700 MB image!).

I was after something lightweight, simple and easy to configure and get up and running without all the frills and flashy features. And I found a hidden geml in envlinks - a really simple dashboard that is supersimple to configure (just env-variables in the compose file) and still customisable enough for my needs.

Hope it will satisfy the need of other minimalists out there :-)

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 27 points 9 months ago

Here we go with "slams" again.

29
submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by krash@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

Hello all, I wan to create an alias of this command: alias dockps = "docker ps --format "table {{.ID}}\t{{.Names}}\t{{.Status}}\t{{.Ports}}""

The syntax for creating an alias is: alias $COMMAND = "docker ps --format "table {{.ID}}\t{{.Names}}\t{{.Status}}\t{{.Ports}}""

However, since there are quote marks, I assume they neet to be escaped with \. But in the case above, I'm getting the errors in fish and bash.

Fish error: $ alias dockps = "docker ps --format \"table {{.ID}} {{.Names}} {{.Status}} {{.Ports}}\""

alias: expected <= 2 arguments; got 3

Bash error: $ alias dockps = "docker ps --format \"table {{.ID}} {{.Names}} {{.Status}} {{.Ports}}\"" bash: alias: dockps: not found bash: alias: =: not found bash: alias: docker ps --format "table {{.ID}} {{.Names}} {{.Status}} {{.Ports}}": not found

What am I doing wrong?

Thanks in advance!

Edit: For fish shell users out there, this can be accomplished by using func: $ function dockerps docker ps --format "table {{.ID}}\t{{.Names}}\t{{.Status}}\t{{.Ports}}" end $ funcsave dockerps

I'm leaving the question up as the question with escape characters is still relevant and can be a learning resouce.

63
submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by krash@lemmy.ml to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

Hello selfhosters.

We all have bare-metal servres, VPS:es, containers and other things running. Some of them may be exposed openly to the internet, which is populated by autonomous malicious actors, and some may reside on a closed-off network since they contain sensitive data.

And there is a lot of solutions to monitor your servers, since none of us want our resources to be part of a botnet, or mine bitcoins for APTs, or simply have confidential data fall into the wrong hands.

Some of the tools I've looked at for this task are check_mk, netmonitor, monit: all of there monitor metrics such as CPU, RAM and network activity. Other tools such as Snort or Falco are designed to particularly detect suspicious activity. And there also are solutions that are hobbled together, like fail2ban actions together with pushover to get notified of intrusion attempts.

So my question to you is - how do you monitor your servers and with what tools? I need some inspiration to know what tooling to settle on to be able that detect unwanted external activity on my resources.

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 27 points 10 months ago

But this is by design, snap containers aren't allowed to read data outside of their confinements. Same goes for flatpak and OCI-containers.

I don't use snap myself, but it does have its uses. Bashing it just because it's popular to hate on snap won't yield a healthy discussion on how it could be improved.

10
submitted 10 months ago by krash@lemmy.ml to c/selfhost@lemmy.ml

Hello selfhosters.

I'm considering to buy a SFF PC to act as a docker host. The main services / applications I'm going to run is going to be Immich. Filebrowser, Samba-share and eventually Paperless-ngx. I've been eyeing PCs with a N100 / N200 specifically to run quiet, and to conserve on energy consumption. I am most likely going for an Asus PN42 and will have an SSD in it to keep the moving parts to a minimum.

To those who are running machines with this CPU and similiar workloads, how has your experience been?

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 26 points 11 months ago

NPP is indispensable, it is the Windows killer-app.

Congrats on the release!

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 44 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

This was dumb on so many levels.

I downloaded an iso and was supposed to dd it to my USB drive. You can see where this is leading, but it's worse than you think.

I overwrote the hdd. While I was on an airplane. Of a macbook air that I had no idea how to restore to a functioning state. And this was my workplace laptop.

Like I said, dumb on many levels...

Edit: while the question is about breaking ones Linux installation, one could argue that macOS share the same lineage as Linux and share many similarities.

15
submitted 1 year ago by krash@lemmy.ml to c/gaming@lemmy.ml

Hey all, I got a giveaway promo code for this game. I'm not into the Apple ecosystem at all, so I won't have any joy out of it. Grapefrukt usually produces quality games, so whoever gets to this code first - enjoy!

More info about the game here: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/subpar-pool/id1546080553

To get the code:

  • multiply all numbers by 3
  • CAPITILIZE ALL LETTERS
  • remove all dashes
  • Enjoy!

PS: I miss the old "play it forward" community, so this will be my first contribution in that spirit here on Lemmy.

spoilerxxj-3j1j-lttp1

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 25 points 1 year ago

I really want to have better tiling and window management in Gnome. Ubuntu has an add-on released with 23.10 that I haven't got around to test yet. And I know that Gnome has that feature in the works, but it annoys me that Windows 11 has better management of windows with window-snapping than my DE of choice.

118
submitted 1 year ago by krash@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

Release notes:

New features in 23.10 Updated Packages

add-apt-repository now adds PPAs as deb822 .sources files (Improvements to PPA management in 23.10 116).

Linux kernel :penguin:

Ubuntu 23.10 includes the new 6.5 Linux kernel that brings many new features.

Notable upstream changes:

Intel’s “Topology Aware Register and PM Capsule Interface” (interface that provides better power-management features).
arm64 permission-indirection extension (technology to set special memory permissions).
RISC-V now supports ACPI.
The Loongarch architecture now supports simultaneous multi-threading (SMT).
Support for unaccepted memory (protocol by which secure guest systems accept memory allocated by the host - Seeking an acceptable unaccepted memory policy 5.
The io_uring subsystem can now store the rings and submission queue in user-space memory.
Ability to mount a file system underneath an existing mount on the same mount point; useful in container scenarios (Merge tag ‘v6.5/vfs.mount’ of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs 5).
New cachestat() system call (query the page-cache state of files and directories).
Usual set of changes to support new hardware.

Notable Ubuntu-specific changes:

zstd compressed modules (LP: #2028568 11) to shorten boot time.
New Apparmor/Stacking LSM patch set.
Updated shiftfs patch set.
Enabled multi-gen LRU page reclaiming by default (LP: #2023629 1).
.config tuning of the low-latency kernel for desktop-oriented tasks (LP: #2028568 6).
New zfs 2.2.0~rc3.
Ceph support for idmapped mounts.

systemd v253.5

The init system was updated to systemd v253.5. See the upstream changelog 6 for more information about individual features. Netplan v0.107

The network stack was updated to Netplan v0.107 3, introducing support for dummy and veth devices in addition to providing Python bindings to libnetplan in the python3-netplan package. Toolchain Upgrades :hammer_and_wrench:

GCC was updated to the 13.2.0 release, binutils to 2.41, and glibc to 2.38.
Python :snake: now defaults to version 3.11.6, and 3.12.0 is available in the archive.
Perl :camel: at version 5.36.0.
LLVM now defaults to version 16, and 17 is available in the archive.
Rust :crab: toolchain defaults to version 1.71.
73
submitted 1 year ago by krash@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

Let's be honest, the rankings of gnome-look are weird at best and there is no good resource to gauge what icons / cursors / themes people like to use in their everyday DE.

So please share what icon-pack / cursor theme / GTK|QT theme you use, and why.

6
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by krash@lemmy.ml to c/selfhost@lemmy.ml

Hello all. I'm trying to change the SSH port on an Oracle VM, but I'm getting nowhere and I don't know where to solve the issue.

I have changed the SSH port:

edit /etc/ssh/sshd_config

Entered the port info:

Port 5522

I restarted the service:

sudo systemctl restart ssh

And made sure that the port is open:

ss -an | grep 5522
tcp   LISTEN 0      128                                                                               0.0.0.0:5522                0.0.0.0:*            
tcp   LISTEN 0      128                                                                                  [::]:5522                   [::]:*    

I also allow incoming traffic to 5522:

sudo ufw allow 5522/tcp comment 'Open port ssh tcp port 5522'

AND just to make sure, I allow 'routed':

sudo ufw default allow FORWARD

And make sure the FW config is valid:

sudo ufw status verbose
Status: active
Logging: on (medium)
Default: deny (incoming), allow (outgoing), allow (routed)
New profiles: skip

To                         Action      From
--                         ------      ----
22/tcp                     ALLOW IN    Anywhere                   # Open port ssh tcp port 22
5522/tcp                   ALLOW IN    Anywhere                  
22/tcp (v6)                ALLOW IN    Anywhere (v6)              # Open port ssh tcp port 22
5522/tcp (v6)              ALLOW IN    Anywhere (v6)              # Open real ssh tcp port 22

Yet, I cannot connect to this server. Trying to ssh -vvvv -p 5522 [ip-adress] yields this:

OpenSSH_9.0p1 Ubuntu-1ubuntu8.4, OpenSSL 3.0.8 7 Feb 2023
debug1: Reading configuration data /etc/ssh/ssh_config
debug1: /etc/ssh/ssh_config line 19: include /etc/ssh/ssh_config.d/*.conf matched no files
debug1: /etc/ssh/ssh_config line 21: Applying options for *
debug2: resolve_canonicalize: hostname 129.x.x.5 is address
debug3: expanded UserKnownHostsFile '~/.ssh/known_hosts' -> '/home/x/.ssh/known_hosts'
debug3: expanded UserKnownHostsFile '~/.ssh/known_hosts2' -> '/home/x/.ssh/known_hosts2'
debug3: ssh_connect_direct: entering
debug1: Connecting to 129.x.x.5 [129.x.x.5] port 5522.
debug3: set_sock_tos: set socket 3 IP_TOS 0x10
debug1: connect to address 129.x.x.5 port 5522: No route to host
ssh: connect to host 129.x.x.5 port 5522: No route to host

I can connect just fine when the port is at 22, but as soon as I change it to 5522, i get the 'no route to host' error.

I've made sure I have rules on Oracle cloud that allows ingress and egress traffic to 0.0.0.0/0 on all protocols, no matter the destination / source.

What am I doing wrong? It feels that this problem is host (server) based rather client based, since I'm getting a routing error. Do I need to configure the routing for that port specifically, and if so how?

PS: Also, connecting to localhost:5522 from the server itself works fine. So the problem is not in the configuration, but likely network related.


EDIT: This issue is solved, solution written on this post: https://lemmy.ml/comment/2787074

6
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by krash@lemmy.ml to c/selfhost@lemmy.ml

Hello all, I'm taking my first steps in the realm of self-hosting and am learning as I go. I have a VM running ubuntu and I got it connected to tailscale network to fend off unwanted visitors. I also have discovered Docker and am using it to deploy two web applications: FreshRSS and Podfetch. I can deploy them through Docker and they both have their own ports which I can access through ipadrress:portnumber URL in my webbrowser. But, the connection is unsecured over HTTP. I'd like to take it a step further in order to make the connections go over HTTPS.

I thought to use Caddy to make a reverse proxy as it is supposed to have good support with Tailscale but I'm not being particularly successful. I can connect to the individual applications (FreshRSS, PodFetch) by using the given tailscale DNS name (machine.domain.ts.net) and port directly in the browsers URL, but going to the machine.domain.ts.net does only yield in a connection error.

I've attached the stdout from running Caddy, my spidersense is telling it is something to do with getting a cert from letsencrypt. Over at tailscale admin, I've ensured I have a tailnet name, MagicDNS and HTTPS certificates enabled.

Here's some relevant information, Caddy log file is at the end.

Thanks in advance

EDIT: solution to my problem at the end of this post.


sudo docker ps

CONTAINER ID   IMAGE                         COMMAND                  CREATED          STATUS          PORTS                                                                                         NAMES                                                                                                                 

86a72dbd2686   samuel19982/podfetch:latest   "./podfetch"             20 minutes ago   Up 18 minutes   0.0.0.0:8480->8000/tcp, :::8480->8000/tcp                                                     podfetch_podfetch_1                                                                                                   

a7dae64308f9   caddy:latest                  "caddy run --config …"   25 hours ago     Up 17 seconds   0.0.0.0:80->80/tcp, :::80->80/tcp, 0.0.0.0:443->443/tcp, :::443->443/tcp, 443/udp, 2019/tcp   caddy                                                                                                                 

141bbf69ad62   freshrss/freshrss             "./Docker/entrypoint…"   2 months ago     Up 2 months     0.0.0.0:8080->80/tcp, :::8080->80/tcp                                                         freshrss

Current Caddyfile:

machine.domain.ts.net

respond "hello"
file_server

docker-compose.yml for Caddy

version: "3"

services:
  caddy:
    image: caddy:latest
    container_name: caddy
    restart: always
    ports:
      - "80:80"
      - "443:443"
    volumes:
      - /home/ubuntu/caddy/caddy_data:/data
      - /home/ubuntu/caddy/caddy_config:/config
      - /home/ubuntu/caddy/Caddyfile:/etc/caddy/Caddyfile

log output from running sudo docker-compose up in the directory where docker-compose.yml is located

Starting caddy ... done                                                                                                                                    

Attaching to caddy                                                                                                                                         

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.0689287,"msg":"using provided configuration","config_file":"/etc/caddy/Caddyfile","config_adapter":"caddyfile"} 

caddy    | {"level":"warn","ts":1691499456.0720005,"msg":"Caddyfile input is not formatted; run 'caddy fmt --overwrite' to fix inconsistencies","adapter":"

caddyfile","file":"/etc/caddy/Caddyfile","line":9}                                                                                                         

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.0762668,"logger":"admin","msg":"admin endpoint started","address":"localhost:2019","enforce_origin":false,"origi

ns":["//localhost:2019","//[::1]:2019","//127.0.0.1:2019"]}                                                                                                

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.0775971,"logger":"http.auto_https","msg":"enabling automatic HTTP->HTTPS redirects","server_name":"srv0"}       

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.077673,"logger":"http.auto_https","msg":"server is listening only on the HTTPS port but has no TLS connection po

licies; adding one to enable TLS","server_name":"srv1","https_port":443}                                                                                   

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.077703,"logger":"http.auto_https","msg":"enabling automatic HTTP->HTTPS redirects","server_name":"srv1"}        

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.07822,"logger":"http","msg":"enabling HTTP/3 listener","addr":":2016"}                                          

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.0783753,"msg":"failed to sufficiently increase receive buffer size (was: 208 kiB, wanted: 2048 kiB, got: 416 kiB

). See https://github.com/quic-go/quic-go/wiki/UDP-Buffer-Sizes for details."}                                                                             

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.0794368,"logger":"http.log","msg":"server running","name":"srv0","protocols":["h1","h2","h3"]}                  

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.079528,"logger":"http","msg":"enabling HTTP/3 listener","addr":":443"}                                          

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.079708,"logger":"http.log","msg":"server running","name":"srv1","protocols":["h1","h2","h3"]}                   

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.0798655,"logger":"http.log","msg":"server running","name":"remaining_auto_https_redirects","protocols":["h1","h2

","h3"]}                                                                                                                                                   

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.0800827,"msg":"autosaved config (load with --resume flag)","file":"/config/caddy/autosave.json"}                

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.0801237,"msg":"serving initial configuration"}                                                                  

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.0802798,"logger":"tls.cache.maintenance","msg":"started background certificate maintenance","cache":"0xc00032950

0"}                                                                                                                                                        

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.080402,"logger":"tls","msg":"cleaning storage unit","description":"FileStorage:/data/caddy"}                    

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499456.0843327,"logger":"tls","msg":"finished cleaning storage units"}                                                 

********************
***** Connection to caddy is made here                                             ********************                                                                                                      

caddy    | {"level":"warn","ts":1691499478.27926,"logger":"http","msg":"could not get status; will try to get certificate anyway","error":"Get \"http://loc

al-tailscaled.sock/localapi/v0/status\": dial unix /var/run/tailscale/tailscaled.sock: connect: no such file or directory"}                                

caddy    | {"level":"error","ts":1691499478.2793655,"logger":"tls.handshake","msg":"getting certificate from external certificate manager","remote_ip":"100

.125.48.40","remote_port":"60140","sni":"machine.domain.ts.net","cert_manager":0,"error":"Get \"http://local-tailscaled.sock/localapi/v0/cert/vaulty.tail

a5148.ts.net?type=pair\": dial unix /var/run/tailscale/tailscaled.sock: connect: no such file or directory"}                                               

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499478.2794874,"logger":"tls.on_demand","msg":"obtaining new certificate","remote_ip":"100.125.48.40","remote_port":"60

140","server_name":"machine.domain.ts.net"}                                                                                                              

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499478.2796874,"logger":"tls.obtain","msg":"acquiring lock","identifier":"machine.domain.ts.net"}                    

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499478.2826056,"logger":"tls.obtain","msg":"lock acquired","identifier":"machine.domain.ts.net"}                     

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499478.2827125,"logger":"tls.obtain","msg":"obtaining certificate","identifier":"machine.domain.ts.net"}             

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499478.285254,"logger":"tls","msg":"waiting on internal rate limiter","identifiers":["machine.domain.ts.net"],"ca":"h

ttps://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory","account":"caddy@zerossl.com"}                                                                              

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499478.2852805,"logger":"tls","msg":"done waiting on internal rate limiter","identifiers":["machine.domain.ts.net"],"

ca":"https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory","account":"caddy@zerossl.com"}                                                                        

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499479.3021843,"logger":"tls.acme_client","msg":"trying to solve challenge","identifier":"machine.domain.ts.net","cha

llenge_type":"tls-alpn-01","ca":"https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory"}                                                                          

caddy    | {"level":"error","ts":1691499479.867296,"logger":"tls.acme_client","msg":"challenge failed","identifier":"machine.domain.ts.net","challenge_ty

pe":"tls-alpn-01","problem":{"type":"urn:ietf:params:acme:error:dns","title":"","detail":"DNS problem: NXDOMAIN looking up A for machine.domain.ts.net - 

check that a DNS record exists for this domain; DNS problem: NXDOMAIN looking up AAAA for machine.domain.ts.net - check that a DNS record exists for this

 domain","instance":"","subproblems":[]}}                                                                                                                  

caddy    | {"level":"error","ts":1691499479.867339,"logger":"tls.acme_client","msg":"validating authorization","identifier":"machine.domain.ts.net","prob

lem":{"type":"urn:ietf:params:acme:error:dns","title":"","detail":"DNS problem: NXDOMAIN looking up A for machine.domain.ts.net - check that a DNS record

 exists for this domain; DNS problem: NXDOMAIN looking up AAAA for machine.domain.ts.net - check that a DNS record exists for this domain","instance":"",

"subproblems":[]},"order":"https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/acme/order/1247308536/200246894916","attempt":1,"max_attempts":3}                          

caddy    | {"level":"info","ts":1691499481.1934462,"logger":"tls.acme_client","msg":"trying to solve challenge","identifier":"machine.domain.ts.net","cha

llenge_type":"http-01","ca":"https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory"}                                                                              

caddy    | {"level":"error","ts":1691499481.7219243,"logger":"tls.acme_client","msg":"challenge failed","identifier":"machine.domain.ts.net","challenge_t

ype":"http-01","problem":{"type":"urn:ietf:params:acme:error:dns","title":"","detail":"DNS problem: NXDOMAIN looking up A for machine.domain.ts.net - che

ck that a DNS record exists for this domain; DNS problem: NXDOMAIN looking up AAAA for machine.domain.ts.net - check that a DNS record exists for this do

main","instance":"","subproblems":[]}}                                                                                                                     

caddy    | {"level":"error","ts":1691499481.7219615,"logger":"tls.acme_client","msg":"validating authorization","identifier":"machine.domain.ts.net","pro

blem":{"type":"urn:ietf:params:acme:error:dns","title":"","detail":"DNS problem: NXDOMAIN looking up A for machine.domain.ts.net - check that a DNS recor

d exists for this domain; DNS problem: NXDOMAIN looking up AAAA for machine.domain.ts.net - check that a DNS record exists for this domain","instance":""

,"subproblems":[]},"order":"https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/acme/order/1247308536/200246898176","attempt":2,"max_attempts":3}

EDIT - SOLUTION: many weeks later, I've learn a few things. Running Caddy bare-metal removed the complexity of dealing with docker networks, but it wasn't as robust as I expected (lets just say - I ran into a very edge-case issue that ruined my day).

The solution to my actual problem was to actually directing the requests to the URL to the actual IP adress of the docker container running the service I want to make avaible, and ensure that both docker and the service are on the same docker network. A very obvious solution in hindsight, and to be fair, I think I've had the misfortune to run into several issues before reaching this insight.

85
submitted 1 year ago by krash@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

I'm pretty new to selfhosting, but one thing that I know to take seriously is log collection. Since there are a lot of different type of logs (kernel log, application logs, etc) and logs come in many different formats (binary, json, strings) - it's no easy task to collect them centrally and look through them whenever neccessarly.

I've looked at grafana and tried the agent briefly, but it wasn't as easy as I thought (and it might be a too big tool for my needs). So I thought to ask the linuxlemmy community to get some inspiration.

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 21 points 1 year ago

I agree with every point. The last paragraph doesn't have to be a problem though: telegram has very open and really nice APIs and enjoys a lot of FOSS 3rd party apps (only matched by matrix). Of course, we can only enjoy that as long the API usage is still free to use...

154
submitted 1 year ago by krash@lemmy.ml to c/fediverse@lemmy.ml

We have bookwyrm.social, which does an excellent job at replacing the need for goodreads (which is owned by Amazon). But is there an alternative to imdb.com?

46
submitted 1 year ago by krash@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

A while ago I used to listen to the Linux outlaws which covered a lot of gtopics in Linux and FOSS. The show has discontinued and I'm looking for your recommendations.

What podcasts do you listen to, and what do you like about them?

view more: next ›

krash

joined 3 years ago