The desktop and previous mobile clients are based off of Element, it’s only the new mobile clients that are custom.
You will have to start the chat from desktop, none of their mobile clients support starting a Matrix chat as of now.
I just didn’t want people to suggest to me to run a different server OS, as I can’t do that (I think).
Is it a run and just works docker compose file?
Kinoite is looking really nice since my Linux is bugged (again).
Is a Docker volume accessible like a folder if I SSH/SFTP into the host machine, not the container?
This has saved so many files from my mistakes before.
Don’t put any data into the container ever. All of your data and configuration should be done in volumes. So are bind mounts (–bind) to the filesystem bad? Am I able to access Docker volumes through SFTP/SSH?
Kinoite probably won’t work for me, but distrobox sounds cool. I’ll check it out.
Isn’t this considered bad in Arch? Or was I misled?
I don’t like tweaking my OS, I need something that just works, hence my madness over important dependencies not installing automatically.
I think that it’s similar to the “Normal VPN without NAT”, but I want it to preserve the client IP all the way through to the server that the client wants to connect to (in other words, the website that the client wants to access will receive the IP of the client, not the VPN server).
I use Spotify for my podcasts, but I will never check out YouTube Music podcasts. Having 2 ads before the start of a podcast as if I’m watching a YouTube video is just unacceptable for me.
You can change the default browser, but it doesn’t matter since all of them are forced to use Apple’s WebKit.
I am using a $5/month server with 1GB of ram, and 25GB of storage. If I want to upgrade it, I need to upgrade to $10/month. Linode doesn’t have a free plan after 60 days.
xyz, because of the low price.
I only buy one year at a time.
It’s too expensive for me (Cloudflare is $10, and my options are $2).
I know, I’m just wondering about the differences between the two registrars. I edited the post to make it less confusing.
It supports E2EE.