

No, actually you’re right. I meant wire guard.


No, actually you’re right. I meant wire guard.


The real answer is, ngnx is a great fit. I already know most quirks of Apache, though, and I don’t necessarily want to pull in another manual to my brain.
I might switch in the future, though. It’d be handy to have that in my pocket.
I’m not using containers, per se, at least not in the docker sense, virtualization is done with is KVM


Those are good options, but Apache isn’t all that overkill. It has some features I need, specifically routing traffic from multiple domain names to different network segments.
Add to that it’s something I’ve understood well for decades, and it makes sense.
If I wanted to go small, though, I could just whip something using Go’s proxies.


thanks! It’s hard not to feel out of my depth, it’s been so long. And, it being my own info, not a corp’s protected by insurance, indemnity, mandatory arbitration, and (as a last resort) backups, the stakes feel a little higher.


Same! Geary is really nice, especially if you’re trying to spend less time on the internet. It does one thing, really well: read and write emails.
Unfortunately I’m not ready to simplify my life like that I guess.


Kmail on Android, Evolution on laptop.
Evo is a little clunky looking but it integrates calendar, contacts, and does PGP seamlessly using Gnome’s key manager.


Yah, I really like this approach. Same reason I set up Timeshift and Mint Backup on all the user machines in my house. For others rsync + cron is aces.
Yep. Edited. Definitely autocorrect’s fault, not my morning brain fog.