

So much bad advice on here. On Windows 11 Pro, just select “Domain join instead”.
So much bad advice on here. On Windows 11 Pro, just select “Domain join instead”.
Or just select local domain login.
I’m sorry, friend, but it seems you’ve missed the point, which is that something like “tea” can mean wildly different things - as evidenced by the contents of this thread. That’s why you specify whether you’re asking for a teabag, a cup of tea, iced tea, green tea, chai tea, a box of tea or whatever. Tuna, however, is always a fish. The concept is simple and so is the difference between the two.
Do you get it now? It’s really not that hard.
Sorry for any confusion, but my question in this thread isn’t about Jellyfin, it’s why can’t I see the comments on the Jellyfin post. When I hover the pointer over the comments button it says there are four posts on the thread, but they’re invisible to me.
Read your own post, mate, it’s clear as day.
Set up a domain with a main site that has links to your different services, then set up reverse proxies so you can put certificates on them and serve them all on port 443. If your WAN IP is relatively static then you can forward ports 80 and 443 to your server and use your own domain, if not you can use something like FreeDNS. Or skip the last bit if you don’t need WAN access.
You’re saying there are tuna that isn’t fish?
If you want a cup of tea then you’ll ask for a cup of tea. You don’t ask for just paper either, you ask for a sheet of paper. Be specific.
I wish I could see the comments on this thread I made. Not sure what’s wrong with lemmy, it’s been like this since I started the thread two days ago. When I click the thread I just see my original post, no comments. Same result if I open the thread from the Selfhosted channel. If I view my own profile history and click the context button, the site just loads forever and never shows anything.
Some people just put their laptop on a table and use the bed when giving oral, but sure, you do you!
Please don’t invent strawman arguments. I haven’t compared collective influence to individual influence, and I haven’t mentioned any hidden cabal or fairytale story. Everything is out in the open and I’m happy to provide my source: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0261379421001256
That’s frankly idiotic, since lobbyists, corporate donors and pressure groups have far, far, far more power to affect policy than voters.
I guess that would depend on the specific case. If you physically went on my computer to steal my token or infected my computer with a virus to do it then we can assume that no other tokens have been compromised. But if the malicious actor has managed to steal tokens from the actual server (which seems to be the case here) and not the client then yes, as the admin I would certainly require that everyone log in again as a safety measure.
If a valid browser token gets stolen like in this case, then MFA won’t do much good because the stolen token will already have been authenticated. Linus Tech Tips experienced the same thing recently, you can check out their channel.
I think I managed to remove NSFW content, but I have no idea if I managed to fix the language issue, that menu needs a lot of work. Thanks Ruud!
I’m seeing lots of posts in German and lots of posts that just contain pictures of gigantic breasts. I don’t speak German and I haven’t been interested in breasts since I was an infant. Is there any way to filter out the languages that I don’t speak as well as NSFW posts?
You may be right that bluetooth now works out of the box on Linux, but that certainly wasn’t the case a year or two ago. And I know for a fact that touchscreens are still hit and miss. I don’t know what improvements have been made to the Network Manager, but I suspect it’s still pretty bare-bones.
It’s possible that things have changed drastically very recently, but I suspect the Linux situation is still mostly the same as before: it’s great for web servers, but frustrating - bordering on unusable - for regular users.
I’ll probably stick with Lemmy until another solution comes around that makes federation easier.
Well, if your needs are very simple then I can certainly understand why you’d be happy with Linux. But regular users need for things like Bluetooth, touchscreens and VPNs to “just work”. I could spend three hours getting my bluetooth microphone to work on Linux or I can just use Windows. The decision is simple.
Solution: Dell Latitude laptop or Dell DA310 hockey puck adapter.