zer0 3mo ago • 100%
Thank you for this new article.
Personally I have no use for Kuma but I am glade that you show us how you make it work with FreeBSD, nice little trick.
Good job!
zer0 3mo ago • 100%
oops ! I think I did not post that in the right /sub/community/ ? lol I don't even know what is it called
Anyway the next one should be a better place for that video: https://blendit.bsd.cafe/c/bsd
I actually never saw that video before, I've learned things. Thanks to the guy who made this.
I saw once libxo in a script but didn't really pay attention to it, but it looks like a cool feature. Nicely explained in this video thanks to this guy, and well done FreeBSD devs.
zer0 3mo ago • 100%
Interesting, thank you for sharing this.
zer0 4mo ago • 100%
Well done sir!
zer0 4mo ago • 100%
I don't know caddy so thank you for the advice, it looks interesting for my use case.
zer0 4mo ago • 100%
Yes, you can almost follow the gitea guides, it’s similar.
Thank you, I'll go with this.
I'll take advantage of having the package available through pkg
instead of building port unless it brings features that I really need, I don't need much only one user and on LAN so it's unlikely I suppose.
Hi BSD community, Just for fun I would like to give `forgejo` a go, after looking at [this post](https://lemm.ee/post/31275721?scrollToComments=true) I noticed that it is available in ports so I wonder if someone has a link or a guide that shows how to configure it on FreeBSD or should I just follow a `gitea` guide because `forgejo` looks like it? It will remain only on the LAN without being reachable from the internet, does the "not https" aka "personal certificate" will be a problem? Thank you.
>In this series, we’re going to try out each of the four major BSD systems. Someone is having fun here! Thank you for this article.
zer0 4mo ago • 100%
Peertube is a good alternative but not so popular sadly.
Even with these Youtube changes I bet people would rather pay instead of using another platform, strange world.
The old internet is almost dead the big companies took it over, everything is about subscription now.
The good news is we don't have to buy it, personally I'll do something else instead of watching YT, case closed :)
zer0 4mo ago • 100%
I am a bit late but yep apparently it's called Userscripts
, that's what the right side bar says.
Anyway well done mate, your theme is very good 👍
zer0 6mo ago • 100%
Congratulations!
zer0 6mo ago • 100%
Perfect!
Thank you for your work and your blog posts too ;)
zer0 6mo ago • 100%
You're welcome, happy to help :)
I see we still have a transparency issue though, at least with dark theme.
To compare here is how it looks for me:
OpenBSD: https://ibb.co/Xzx11sH
NetBSD: https://ibb.co/pWXyHLT
FreeBSD: https://ibb.co/sWvmxbG
While converting pick the "png" extension instead of "jpeg" that should solve the problem hopefully.
I noticed that other "subs" from blendit.bsd.cafe have actually a nice and good looking banner while our looks unfinished, there is a problem with the transparent background apparently. JPEG doesn't play well with transparency. So just in case I made the same banner but in SVG (which keeps the quality picture what ever the resolution) and changed black letters for red to make them readable even on dark theme. Hope that can help a bit the admin to solve the issue we have here. Thank you. preview: https://ibb.co/C2vMfWL banner in svg: https://lufi.ethibox.fr/r/PTxud1VJWw#OkytHyxzf5XdeLenuk8RO3yUQEjwgTnVFxkki1o6TcE=
zer0 6mo ago • 100%
Ho god what am I reading now.
The Tao itself is already mystical, put it over programming style and you get something ... I would say "special" and funny.
Good catch my friend 😆
zer0 6mo ago • 100%
Whatever the reason new blood is always welcome!
zer0 6mo ago • 100%
I am not sure to understand, I know what "rootless" means but "rootless root" needs a link or an explanation at least.
But I am convinced that it's not a dance thing:
https://rootlessroot.com
zer0 7mo ago • 100%
OpenBSD and artwork, I am not an OpenBSD user but I've always enjoyed looking at these pictures https://www.openbsd.org/images/King_of_Kings.jpg
zer0 7mo ago • 100%
I've got them all, so I know what I am saying there is no reason for me to lie on such thing.
If I refer to the picture I would say they did some modifications after listening to the feedback and it's a good thing.
The only regret when I see that picture is to think that I may be bought them too early.
zer0 7mo ago • 100%
Geekworm Pi 3 case (also fits Pi 2)
Exact, it fits to the Pi3 and Pi2 but there is a little inconvenience with the Pi2 because the power lights are on the left while the wholes on the case are on the right, so with the Pi2 you don't see the green/red light. The rest of the case fits well.
It's not a big deal but still one must be warned.
I’ve also ordered some extra strips of cooling pads and added them to the bottom side of the CPU and the RAM chip beneath - so that heat gets sent to the case as well.
Nice trick.
zer0 7mo ago • 100%
Yep the Flirc case is good looking but it stops there, it's not as efficient as one would expect from passive cooling.
I tried few fanless cases, Flirc included and I was not impressed, the top of the case is not aluminum but plastic, strange choice.
Geekworm does a better job, at least the one I've got, never goes over 55°C in hot summer, the rest of the year is around 39°C to 43°C not more.
The case is heavy and sturdy, it doesn't feels cheap at all.
https://geekworm.com/collections/raspberry-pi/products/raspberry-pi-4-heavy-duty-aluminum-passive-cooling-metal-case
zer0 1y ago • 100%
git clone https://github.com/NetBSD/src
Apparently you can use git instead if you prefer (from page 9)