I’m already hosting pihole, but i know there’s so much great stuff out there! I want to find some useful things that I can get my hands on. Thanks!

Edit: Thanks all! I’ve got a lil homelab setup going now with Pihole, Jellyfin, Paperless ngx, Yacht and YT-DL. Going to be looking into it more tomorrow, this is so much fun!

  • @dinosaurdynasty@lemmy.world
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    12 years ago

    An RSS reader (I use Miniflux), ended up being extremely useful

    • Almost every piece of software worth selfhosting has an RSS feed for updates (e.g., every GitHub releases page has an RSS feed). I started selfhosting a good deal more after setting up Miniflux.
    • Like omg there is this whole internet out there outside of Reddit/Twitter/etc that does RSS. The vast majority of blogs have RSS (e.g., Wordpress and Substack). I wish I had discovered RSS decades ago, so many websites I’ve forgotten because I would check updates manually and eventually just forget. I even host a personal Nitter instance so I can follow Twitter people in Miniflux.
  • @itpcc@lemmy.world
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    22 years ago

    PiHole!

    One of the easiest installer I’ve ever seen. Significantly less ads to be shown especially one on non-browser.

    • @darcmage@lemmy.world
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      12 years ago

      This was my gateway into the selfhosting world. I don’t think I would’ve kept going if it didn’t make such drastic difference to my browsing experience.

    • Silver Golden
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      02 years ago

      for better or worse it is, (though I don’t recommend newcomers to boot up a bind server to manage their dns, pihole is probally the best starting point)

      • @MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world
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        02 years ago

        Indeed, dnsmasq would be much easier to handle than BIND OOTB. I have personally not come across a reason to use BIND for myself, and struggle to see its appeal out of the enterprise/enterprise-like labs, but I don’t really know much about homelabbing either

        • Silver Golden
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          12 years ago

          In my (our) case we use bind to run an authoritative resolver for our domain (I am sysadmin for a uni computer society, we have our own (physical) servers)

  • SmokeyDope
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    22 years ago

    You can self host a local chatgpt like ai known as a local large language model. Searx and Searxbg are great customizable meta search engines that you can customize to scrape whatever you want

  • @Nairb@lemm.ee
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    02 years ago

    Whats a good way for me to take the dive into self hosting without getting myself in trouble security wise? I would love something that is basic to build off of as I experiment with it to teach myself the more advanced stuff.

    • Alfenstein
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      12 months ago

      Late reply, but tailscale is really easy to use and is secure for experimentation.

  • @androidul@lemmy.ml
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    14 days ago

    Hi Average Joe 👋 just start with a simple PiHole installation. From here on, the options are endless

    • wia
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      02 years ago

      Can you provide more details as to why id want this over pihole? I’ve had a container on my interior server with pihole without issues for years. Should I change?

    • @haleywm@startrek.website
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      111 months ago

      Thanks for teaching me about LiveSync, not being able to sync my notes with mobile without an obsidian account has been annoying, but none of the web based interfaces look at nice or as usable as obsidian. Being able to sync everything between desktops and mobile will be really handy.

    • @Gecko@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      While Vaultwarden is great I would not suggest selfhosting your password manager unless you do regular backups. Losing all your password cause your server went down is a great way to ruin your day.

      • @Amcro@lemmy.world
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        52 years ago

        I don’t think that’s true. Even when Bitwarden server is down you can still access your Bitwarden vault, use and export all passwords. You can’t save new passwords but using existing ones should work perfectly fine. So, when your server is down/broken, export your vault, fix server and get new Vaulwarden instance up and import your vault again. Thats it. I still find it safer to selfhost it than getting my passwords leaked.

        • @zeitgeist@discuss.tchncs.de
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          12 years ago

          Nevertheless, are backups crucial. But it is relatively easy with vaultwarden-backup and the free object storage of AWS, Oracle and so on.

  • matlag
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    12 years ago

    So, if you don’t know yet what you’re doing, I wouldn’t host anything critical yet, but I’m using:

    https://yunohost.org/

    And so far, very few troubles. It’s a layer on top of Debian to ease self-hosting. Comes by default with email and XMPP server. You can add Nextcloud and many other services as you wish.

    • @Billy_Gnosis@lemmy.world
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      -22 years ago

      Doesn’t looks like this is available for Linux? I have older hardware running Mint that this would be perfect for. Am I just missing it?

      • matlag
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        22 years ago

        It IS literally a Linux distribution, based on Debian with a layer on top of it for easy admin and managing applications. So you don’t install it on Linux, you just install it.

  • @paraxion@lemm.ee
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    02 years ago

    For me, it was a wiki/knowledge base - I’ve had dozens over the years as I’ve tried to find the ‘right’ one, but I’m currently a fan of @bookstack@fosstodon.org. My brain’s not always the most reliable, and so my wiki becomes my ‘external brain’. A lot of people are using things like Obsidian/Notion/etc in the same way.

    • @PracticalParrot@discuss.tchncs.de
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      02 years ago

      I might decide to try this for bookmarks. My current problem is I collect all info in various bookmarks. Like open source tools > media/office/bookmarks , royaltyfree > music/pictures/movies, cloud services > storage/VPS/dedicated, temp shares > files/images/video etc etc etc

      It ends up with a lot of duplicates because some things fit into multiple categories, I’m at over 3k bookmarks now.
      I am curious if it might work well to use bookstack for that instead. Thank you for the idea.

      • @phampyk@lemmy.world
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        02 years ago

        May I suggest you benotes for that?

        Really happy with it, hast folders, subfolders, tags and search. Still on development, but I like it enough to recommend it every time someone looks for a way to sort their bookmarks

        • @PracticalParrot@discuss.tchncs.de
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          -12 years ago

          Thanks! I actually did briefly try it as a Keep notes replacement, but decided against it purely because the checklist function does not actually remove the item from the list so it doesn’t work as a shopping list, so the wife would never use it!

          I did not consider the potential of using it to store bookmarks. I’ll give it another look. Thanks!

  • KNova
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    92 years ago

    For me it’s 100% Nextcloud. It was a pain to get working at first (and I’m dreading the day it breaks, if that happens). But it is so much more than just a self-hosted Dropbox solution:

    • Maps
    • Calendar
    • Email
    • Markdown editor (I’m using this to try and replace Google Drive for collaborative document editing with my friends; most of what we need can be achieved with Markdown formatting)
    • I haven’t tried it but there is a Talk plugin that allows for video conferencing in browser;
    • a bunch of other stuff I’ve never played with like mind maps, PDF conversion, music player, etc.
    • @DengueDucky@lemmy.ml
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      162 years ago

      My experience has been that Nextcloud can do 1000 different things, and it sucks at all of them.

      • @plo@feddit.nl
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        12 years ago

        I tried setting up nextcloud. Just ended up creating a samba share instead.

      • Entropy
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        11 year ago

        Been using nextcloud for about 5 years, right now I use it for storing files and nothing else, and it still kinda sucks at that.

        Gonna use paperless for any documents I have in NC, after that there won’t be much left in there, just some old dot files. Maybe I’ll get rid of it entirely

      • @please_lemmy_out@lemmy.world
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        62 years ago

        That’s a little harsh but I definitely agree it doesn’t tend to offer a better or equal alternative to any free options available. You’re giving up a certain level of ease of use.

    • Bilb!
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      12 years ago

      Yes, Nextcloud. It’s not perfect, but it has made my life easier for the last few years