I haven’t bought HDDs in a while, but back in the day you could find deals on stuff like WD My Books on sale and just shuck them.
Incessant tinkerer since the 70’s. Staunch privacy advocate. SelfHoster. Musician of mediocre talent. https://soundcloud.com/hood-poet-608190196
I haven’t bought HDDs in a while, but back in the day you could find deals on stuff like WD My Books on sale and just shuck them.


English is complicated bro. I wouldn’t worry too much about it. If you are multi-lingual, you’ve got more going for you than most Americans. In general, use “a” before words that begin with a consonant sound. Use “an” before words that begin with a vowel sound.


Wouldn’t take much to implement a solar panel to run it tho.


I’ve got an old slate that school marms used to hand out to their students to do their schoolwork on.
I’ve got Grocy set up with Barcode Buddy for my pantry. When I bring staples in from the store, I scan them into the pantry. I have a scanner set up at the pantry for convenience. Then when you consume a product, you scan it out of inventory via a scanner in the kitchen. That way, if I am grocery shopping, and there is a killer deal on a 100 lb sack of rice, sugar, flour, etc, I can check inventory and see if I need to restock. It’s very handy and there are other aspects of Grocy, but I only use it for the pantry.


Briefly. I didn’t like it as much as I like n8n. Perhaps it was not suitable to my use case. I hear a lot of good things about ActivePieces tho. You know, give it a spin and see if it gehaws with your flow. From what I understand, both can acomplish about the same. I think ActivePieces is geared more towards cloud deployments whereas n8n keeps things local.


Well, that’s something to think about. I’ve always thought it best to take mine out. Tempting fate and all that.


I had one active a good while back. To quote Buddy Guy ‘…ain’t nuthin’ wrong with that.’ Hell, I have a 15 year old, self build computer. I use it daily. It works, and pretty well too.
If you haven’t already, I’d see if you can run it sans battery, just power cord. Reason being, old laptop batteries can be a hazard. They can swell and burst, they can over heat,. In some cases, they can become a fire hazard. Best to be safe.
If you’ve already done so, then awesome , and ignore the second paragraph. Is this your first foray into selfhosting?
If I had equipment that would run AI locally, I’d be on it.
Hello! I’m new to self hosting and networking stuff.
Welcome to the club! Explore, learn, have fun on your selfhosting journey.
But I’m very afraid of exposing the server to the internet and it being hacked or such. I know there’s something called Tailscale but I’m not sure if that’s what I need.
What I have done is use Cloudflare Tunnels/Zero Trust free tier and Tailscale as an overlay on the server. With Cloudflare Tunnels/Zero Trust, you don’t need to fiddle with NAT, UFW, or any of that. You install it on your server and it punches through all of that and creates a tunnel between your server and endpoint. You will need a FQDN that you can change the nameservers on to the ones Cloudflare will assign you. Cloudflare will sell you a domain name, but I know a lot of folks use NamesCheap or Pork Bun.
As far as consulting AI for help, and at the risk of being down voted, I would utilize it for basic things you might need some clarification on. I would be very cautious of copying and pasting code generated with AI as sometimes it can be in error. Plus, you should really never rip code from the internet and deploy it on a production server until you really get some experience and time under your belt in order to be able to spot problems with AI code. Claude is good, Grok and Lumo are decent.
As far as the arr stack, I’ll leave that to others.
ETA: Get in the habit of documenting everything you do on your server. All the commands, everything. It will save your butt in the long run. I usually open Notepad ++ and write everything there. Afterwards, I clean up the notes and transfer them to Obsidian for archival and future reference. Do not get suckered into the idea that you will remember everything you’ve done 6 months down the road. You probably won’t and it will be frustrating troubleshooting.


As others have mentioned, Tailscale would be about the easiest to do, imo. However, I would still walk her through installing RDP. That way you can administer whatever may happen in the future, which is very likely to happen.


I really like n8n. It appeals to my visual sense which makes up for a lot of hard programming experience. I don’t run it full with the AI aspect. Not because I have some agenda against AI, but that my equipment is not good enough to run AI efficiently. I use it for a lot of automation around the lab.


Nobody ever knows. There’s never an explanation if the commenter gave inaccurate information, which would be super helpful. It’s just ‘here, have some down votes.’


Very nice. Simple, straight forward. Could be used as a homepage. Thank you!


Lots of good, solid information. Thanks for sharing, and thanks for making it available to the selfhosted community.


Right, but if you have the ability to block wireguard coming out of Russia, wouldn’t it make sense to block Wireguard or any other VPN protocol into Russia? I mean, China is rather notorious for blocking VPN usage but citizens still use them to access the internet. I would imagine Chinese citizens would use something like a combination of WireGuard with obfuscation like stunnel, cloaking, domain fronting-like setups, and proxy chains.


WireGuard is blocked by DPI in 10+ countries now.
So, explain this to me. I hear people talk about blocked VPNs, and it’s true that some websites do block most, if not all, VPN. However, you mentioned Russia, and I use Wireguard, and I have no issues accessing Russian sites. I just visited government.ru. So, is the problem getting out of Russia, or getting in?
It is worth noting that docker firewalling and ufw don’t play well together
This. It took me a little fiddling to get it right
Please do report back. I am always down to learn new tricks.
I’m not sure that all laptops support capping, and I’m not sure if Panasonic ToughBook supports the drivers necessary to cap. I guess you could deploy TLP and check
sudo tlp-stat -b