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Cake day: July 3rd, 2023

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  • Certainly! I’m not sure when I’ll get around to actually doing it, but my intent was to create an emergency boot drive to send to my elderly family members that they could plug in if the system ever started acting up, and I’ll build it in such a way that it’ll be able to be booted as a Linux live USB, and also have a Windows partition for any tools that I might need for remote access and in-system diagnostics.

    I’ve built a few scripts for the Linux bootable but I can’t seem to remember where I stored that particular repo at the moment, so I’ll share later.

    Some of my stuff is up on my GitHub (same username)







  • You can’t both bridge your current router and use it for WiFi AP because of the hierarchy of the network. You’ll need either a compatible AP-capable WiFi radio in your be router (hard to find, limited compatibility, I think you might top out at WiFi 4e (ac1350) in terms of what hardware is available.

    Alternatively, you can use a dedicated access point alongside your new router which is easier and will get you better, more up to date, technology


  • Depends if you count downstream distros with community package lists and sources:

    Zorin OS (Ubuntu downstream paid and free versions) Linux Mint (development community focus, Ubuntu downstream) Rocky Linux (open source CentOS replacement)

    Of course you’ve always got OpenSUSE and FreeBSD


  • pyr0ball@reddthat.comtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldAdvice for home hosting
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    1 year ago

    Get yourself a decent router capable of running OpenWRT, which will allow you to set up vlan’s for your lab, and (I would also recommend) another separate vlan for your IoT and other “smart” devices.

    The TP-Link Archer C7 is old but reliable and has a lot of open source support.

    If you’re feeling more adventurous You could also build your own router with any computer that’s got two or more Ethernet ports using PFSense, Firewall-NG, or IPFire