I use Authentik to handle the SSO for my self hosted services. However I'm thinking about moving over to LLDAP + Authelia, that way I can fully declaratively set it up in nix
There are a lot of recommendations to work on other SW projects. Be careful with this if there is a clause in your employment agreement (if you have one) regarding any work you do during work hours being owned by them. Especially don't do it on your work PC.
I was about to say that I would fully expect that any government entity should run their own instance of various federated services. And all departments/whatever should be on said instance. This would go for chrt platforms as well, such as matrix
I would argue that that would put him in the running for "most powerful". If for no other reason, he's very powerful since he can destroy a lot of the world if he wants to...
"The power to destroy a thing is the absolute control over it" ~Frank Herbert, Dune
I've been in the process of migrating everything over do Nix. Love it so much.
What hole does Ansible fill for you? I haven't looked into it in the past really, so just curious. I have a single Paoxmox node so don't really need horizontal scaling orchestration.
Idk if you're being sarcastic or anything, but I'll actually answer the question. Apologies if this is unnecessary.
You can hook up an Over the Air antenna (like one listed in this article ), which you can hook up directly to a lot of TVs I think.
Instead of connecting to your TV, you can get an IP Tv Tuner, like HDHomeRun. This let's you connect the antenna to your home network and access the feed from your computer and their app. It also provides a video stream that Jellyfin and Plex (I'd bet Kodi as well) can access.
I went to university with a large deaf population. Back then I thought it was weird seeing people I knew were deaf walking around with really nice over ear headphones on (like beats and such) until I heard one listening and the bass was cranked seemingly all the way up. Then it made sense
I don't want to defend Google, but I don't think that this is actually a sinister thing. In some areas you legally need to notify the other party the call is being recorded (two party consent). So this covers that base to prevent the user from accidentally breaking the law, and potentially shifting liability to Google.
Hmmm, I loved Heavenly Hash growing up....