started with a simple media server, now i’m running my own mail, calendaring, document storage, password manager, vpn, monitoring, and probably half a dozen other things i’ve forgotten about. my wife just asks if “the internet is working” now, not ‘is netflix down’. it’s glorious, but also… a lot. anyone else go from zero to homelab hero in record time? what kicked off your journey into the self-hosted abyss?
pihole…
Then it got expensive for me.
But it’s fun :)What in the AI generated bullshit spam are your posts? You’ve made like 4 to this community in the past day, and your account is less than a month old. Stop it.
meh, probably smoked a bowl and got chatty. Happens.
Probably about the time BBS became more popular. I guess there was arpnet, and all these nets, mostly for science, academics, or governmental. Then they essentially rolled it all into one and viola! The internet was born. (It’s a bit more involved) I’ve hosted BBS, forums, chats, irc, a fully licensed/automated internet radio station with live shows with requests et al, <deep breath> services, websites, you name it.
Unfortunately, my brain is shit now, and I’ve forgotten so much. So, sometimes I have to re-learn on a cyclical basis. Plus, the technology is moving now at such a blinding speed, what I did even 5 years ago is old school. Needless to say, I keep copious notes. Somebody is gonna go through all my stuff when I’m gone and think ‘What the devil? This looks like some weird kind of manifesto in some sort of long forgotten code.’ LOL
I have to start to learn how to automatically create notes. I’m starting to forget how my systems work together, too. Fortunately when I research something I do it the same way every time so I come up with the same result, then go to implement it and find all the scripts etc that I forgot about that do that job.
I hate the “Microsoft Recall” idea, but damn, I need something like that with an AI to keep it indexed and searchable as it relates to my activities. All self-hosted, of course.
Can relate. When I get to going on something, I have to force myself to pause, write the shit down, and proceed on. Then after the session, I’ll review my notes and insert any addenda that needs to clarify a certain point or problem I had that I fixed. It’s a process for sure, but for the most part, I can stand up a Linux server, with firewalls, defenses, docker containers, et al and be ready for production in about a solid day’s work. So, notes are paramount and I lean on them heavily. Then, after everything is buttoned up, I save the raw notes in a labeled sub-folder that gets backed up to multiple stores such as /projects/takeovertheworldproject/. Finally I transfer that to Trillium, which is searchable, and it too gets backed up.
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Minecraft server on a laptop. Life has never been the same since.




