Interesting. As I said, I never tried yunohost. I usually work with podman, and just assign local ports to pods, then route traffic to those ports internally, which seems to work fine.
Anyway, I feel like we won't be solving OPs issue here. Still, interesting to see some of the problems people with different setups have to deal with.
That's also how it works for almost everyone I know in Germany. I think the last time I wasn't able to just tap my card was before the pandemic. The only time I touched cash recently was when an old lady insisted on giving me some for fixing her computer. Feel like we're mostly caught up (in that regard - don't mention fax machines). Well, in the cities at least. Outside of them ... I honestly dunno.
I think the most cash based country I've been to was Japan, funnily enough.
I'm also in Germany. Most banks offer either a credit or debit Visa or MasterCard, with the debit version usually being accepted like a credit card would be, excluding some edge cases.
Even Sparkassen seem to slowly be transitioning to that option, though it took them 10 years longer than everyone else. So, unless you don't want to use a Visa or MasterCard for philosophical reasons (which I could understand, their stranglehold on the market is very annoying), your bank probably offers something that would be accepted there.
I have to admit that I have no experience with yuno. Always seemed interesting, but not like something that fits into my work flow.
If they're self-hosting at home (which I'm also doing for some services), I'd presume they're probably running their stuff on a single machine, so I'm not sure where their router would come Into it. The data the cloudflare tunnel process receives should look the same to the router no matter the port it is ultimately sent to, and when it is sent to an address internal to the machine, shouldn't pass through the router again.
I presume they mean pointing their cloudflare tunnel to direct lemmy.example.com to http://localhost/:[port], and I don't think there's any special rules about that port from cloudflares site.
I use tunnels and ports in about that range for all my sites, and don't have any problems.
I have a broken phone with failed glue lying around. Might be a fun weekend project. Is it still destruction of property if you tell them beforehand that your phone will fry their device?
Edit: Well, not fully broken, but the parts to fix it properly cost more than the device. Even though it has a midrange snapdragon and 12 gigs of ram, 256 gigs of storage. Might try to find out whether there's any way to connect the board to a generic screen, but I'd wager there isn't. Really love the mobile device market.
Edit edit: We're getting really off-topic now, but looks like that board used a MIPI DSI connector, I think? Seems like it is standardised enough that it might be possible to source a generic screen and use it kinda like a sbc? Getting that to work might be the actual fun weekend project hiding here.
You probably don't need me to tell you, but keep good backups. Friend of mine recently had his account nuked without any reason given, and without the possibility of recourse.
I've got a Pixel 8a with Graphene. After the unskippable warning that the device is running a different OS, the actual boot-up is pretty quick.
The compiling of apps after big updates can take a while, but that happens in the background in userspace, after which you're prompted to restart all affected apps.
Interesting. As I said, I never tried yunohost. I usually work with podman, and just assign local ports to pods, then route traffic to those ports internally, which seems to work fine.
Anyway, I feel like we won't be solving OPs issue here. Still, interesting to see some of the problems people with different setups have to deal with.