overtinker 1y ago • 100%
Looks incredible. Great shot! Did you add the frame in post? I can't make out what it is
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
This looks promising! I will try it out when I get access to my laptop. Thanks a lot!
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
Hahah, I guess I'm just picky with my screen estate. I like to maximize the space on my webpages. I have the Sidebery extension for vertical tabs on the sidebar which only opens when I hover over it and I disabled the traditional tabs shown at the top. All that's left is to trim that pesky scrollbar!
I would like to make it really thin (and potentially rounded) I rememeber having something like that on my previous PC a while ago but I can't find the CSS for it. This customization also applied to all websites I visited (including iFrames). Would greatly appreciate any help!
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
That's amazing! Thanks a lot this is really useful
overtinker 1y ago • 0%
Sounds fancy. What does that do?
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
Ah yeah, sorry. I missed the part about it being on mobile. If you're syncing your Firefox account across phone and desktop you can just send all of your tabs to your desktop where you can just bookmark them with those extensions. I hope this helps!
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
Hey! I do this too. It's a not so great habit but the Treestyle tabs firefox extension does exactly what you need. You can select all tabs and click bookmark tabs. I actually recommend another similar extension called Sidebery*. It can even create occasional snapshots so in the case of a browser or system crash you have backups on disk or memory.
EDIT: Oops, meant to say Sidebery not Tabby. Sorry, wrote that just before bed. Tabby is a great terminal emulator though!
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
I'm also sharing some of my services but with family members and my upload is at around 10mbps. How do you go about sharing Jellyfin specifically with your friends over a VPS? I mostly just worry about storage space as it gets incredibly expensive to host media in the cloud.
overtinker 1y ago • 0%
Hey! Sorry just getting into Linux, I love learning about cool ways of doing things more efficiently. What does this do exactly? I've noticed others mentioning CTRL+R and I am not sure what that means either. Thank you!
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
Yeah I just tuned in and it seems like they weren't sure whether or not he can get it out of the grass himself. They might just be extra cautious with flags now given how bad they were with safety measures so far this season
overtinker 1y ago • 0%
This actually makes me feel better haha. I always felt thay my English is STILL not good enough, even after 5 years of living in an English speaking country, to fully understand dialogue on screen.
Also, props to you for scoring that username
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
Nice! :) thanks for the link!
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
Sorry to steal your post but I am looking to set up the same thing and I am wondering if Hetzner is good for this? They have a VERY attractive 20tb network traffic allowance for only ~£4/month
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
How much did you pay for the mini PC?
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
Dude same. Fucking adore Boost. The customizability is just so so good. I made it exactly the way I wanted and in the 5 years I used it I was able to switch phones and import my settings seamlessly. Best app.
overtinker 1y ago • 100%
I love that about Caddy as well, it just works!
Do you know of any tool that can help me look at overall traffic that goes through it?
Right now I am using Mullvad through gluetun to essentially route traffic to my services without opening ports on my router and I am just curious what sort of traffic is hitting my server seeing how (I hope) isolated my address seems to be (servicename.mydomain.tld:<random port recieved from mullvad port forwarding>)
I will soon migrate this reverse proxy setup to a VPS since Mullvad will be sunsetting their port forwarding feature soon but I am still in need of a tool that can show me what sort of traffic goes through Caddy. Something like countries, IPs and services that they are trying to access as well as the request types.