You're self-hosting? Better keep in check what happens to the people who depend even indirectly on your services when you're gone.
A reminder that this is an easy migration. Can also be towards you own instance of Forgejo of course.
So much this... I'm sick of all those little businesses having only an Instagram or Facebook account or whatever. I wish we'd have proper websites for all of those instead.
Also, it's likely a pessimistic estimate... Indeed, it's mostly based on a list from Kagi, which likely doesn't list many sites which would qualify.
Interesting setup for self hosting on immutable infrastructure using bootc.
Looks like an interesting tool to check you're doing "everything right" on your blog. That said, it looks like quite a few hoops to jump through. I wish there'd be a way to make all this a bit easier.
Nice ideas for setting up your own infrastructure at home.
Get out and write indeed. You can fiddle with the tools later.
Things went too far with the cloud monoculture. It's time to remember that it doesn't always makes sense, and in the case of databases maybe it's rarely worth it to go for fully managed options.
Those AI scrapers are really out of control... the length one has to go to just to host something now.
This can go a long way without much changes. It's definitely worth it.
This is getting more and more accessible. It's also one of the uses which makes sense for LLMs.
Interesting breakdown of a possible organisation for accessing self-hosted hardware at home through wireguard.
Nice opinions on why to get back into RSS. Also comes with a few interesting options and suggestions (I'm happy with my current reader though, but who knows).
Interesting tips and caveats when using Tailscale.
Definitely over engineered but a good way to play with many interesting tools.
It's nice to see there are turn key solutions for hosting your own XMPP server nowadays. And the community behind this one even improve on the mobile applications.
There is some truth to this. Self-hosting isn't for everyone just for the skills and compromises it requires. We need more widely available solutions without the corporate overlords.
Nice trick to properly route from a public VPS with enough addresses to servers in your basement.
You don't need to self-host the mail itself, but you definitely should control the domain.