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Adding the following that i have not seen mentioned yet:
Docker - I literally run most of my server programs with docker now. Home Assistant, Jellyfin, and many others.
Tiny Media Manager that I use to scraper and organize my media library
Tiny Tiny RSS to combine my news sites into one aggregator. I actually saw this post on it since Lemmy has RSS feeds!
Openwrt I run as my home router.
I2P but it's still pretty clunky.
Nomachine I use as a remote desktop client.
RocketDock I still use on my windows desktop after windows removed the programs toolbar.
ImageJ/Fiji I use for image processing, it's from the NIH, with a bunch of Java plugins.
Gluetun I use to run my vpn client
Kodi for multimedia
Why tinyMediaManager over other options like Sonarr and Radarr?
I use Tiny media manager to get tv show episode and movie info like fan art, actors and show synopsis and organize my movies, shows, music and audiobooks I get from CDs, DVDs, Blu Rays and downloads. Sonarr and Radarr only snatch files from torrents, and not the rest of the info that is needed for offline mode
That's what Jellyfin can do for you (if you store the nfo files along the media).
Pfsense
Opnsense. Been running it in my router with all the treats for years. Updates frequently and easily. You can do things like tailscale, wireguard, traffic shaping, or adblock in the firewall level pretty easily with it.
Awesome project.
I especially love the new Wireguard ui. Made it so much easier to understand how to set it up.
I've been debating on trying out offense instead of OpenWrt. My server has a dual NIC with one interface going to my modem the other to a wireless access point. Openwrt is a bit clunky as I have to boot it in Virtual box. Any difference between PFsense and opensense?
I went for opnsense without even trying pfsense - purely because I don't trust the company behind pfsense, and came across some mentions of their dubious behavior. No regrets, opnsense is pretty great.
fuck Docker.
Whats wrong with docker?
For those who don't even know what it is, why?
For me docker runs my software in independent containers like jellyfin. For me it helps with migrating the software to different computers, operating systems and os upgrades without completely having to reconfigure the software each time.
Not sure about the fuck docker comment. I'm always open to alternatives, not everyone has the same software needs.
Basically like a sort of mini-VM.
What it solves (for me) is dependency hell.
No need to install a quadrillion dependencies and solve if two different programs want the same package but maybe different versions.
Instead of fiddling with that, the image isolates the components.
This way I could run 5 different web servers on different ports.
Yes they complicate troubleshooting but the upsides are way more valuable to me.
For me ot actually sinplifies troubleshooting by a lot. No worries when messing around inside the container. Maintainers are looking at the same picture as ypu and can reproduce everything more easily.
Without docker I could never run all the services I am currently.
Also asking ~ any other great app for 3-5 person video call/conferencing for making music together (in sync :)?
Jitsi is awesome jitsi.org