What limits did you hit?
CTRL+Z
What limits did you hit?
Clarity:
NPM (Nginx Proxy Manager) != npm (node package manager).
Yes.
Check out Silver Bullet.
Some of the nicer models of UPS have little servers built in for remote management, and also communicate to their tenants via USB or Serial or Emergency Power Off (EPO) Port.
You shouldn’t have to write a script that polls battery status, the UPS should tell you. Be told, don’t ask.
“We don’t know how to rate limit our API or set billing alarms in the AWS console.”
That is completely possible right now.
I’ve only got one interface done at the moment:
The complicated one, ha-lcars. It takes a while to get things looking good - looks like total trash out of the box, actually.
I have the LCARS theme for my HomeAssistant, which takes telemetry from PiHole.
Probably not!
What models of GPU and Motherboard are you using?
Hey, some companies still don’t fix what ain’t broke.
Linode was bought by Akamai in 2022, it might not be the same as it was previously.
If you spend that much time on something you get good at it.
My bowling average begs to differ.
I taught my users markdown with StackEdit, a side-by-side WYSIWYG / Markdown generator. It opened some doors for us in terms of the tech we could use behind the scenes.
What is a smart globe?
Because I don’t care to roll my own Perl DOCKERFILE, I use a LinuxServer.io Container running ddclient.
It handles the scripting, you set up the config (with a supported DNS provider).
I also made this stupid mistake. Thanks for posting the solve.
Not OP but my fiber optic Internet is not on the same power grid as the rest of my house. I’ve got a battery backup on my routers and modem for exactly this reason. I’ve got a UPS to handle a power outage into automatic graceful shutdown at 33% remaining.
Ah. I’m running HA out of docker currently and haven’t hit any walls, but I’m not exactly pushing it. There’s an annoyance where I have to tell HA to trust my docker’s default IP, and there was some reverse-proxy messing around I had to do to get it working on my network. Once it’s up and loaded, it’s indistinguishably HomeAssistant.