Source: https://www.unisq.edu.au/news/2026/01/earth-meets-mars
(Nice!)
aka gkaklas@{lemm{ings.world,y.{zip,world,ee}},programming.dev}
aspe:keyoxide.org:CZQI42SE5HXWZCFPARIGCNK32A
Source: https://www.unisq.edu.au/news/2026/01/earth-meets-mars
(Nice!)
https://lemmy.zip/comment/19712446
Reminder of this:
https://poolp.org/posts/2019-08-30/you-should-not-run-your-mail-server-because-mail-is-hard/
And that mailu.io (and other similar projects) makes self-hosting email almost trivial 😁 (at least for people that can run a pre-configured
docker-compose.ymland buy their domain etc)
Yes, it’s pretty good! I’m a DevOps engineer, and have experience with Ansible, Docker, etc, but I just couldn’t find time to deploy services the best way that I wanted™ for my personal server
So, even though it e.g. doesn’t even use Docker, yunohost really helped me start using the many services I wanted/needed, which otherwise might take e.g. a few hours to a couple of days for each of them to research and configure
So I have one “production” yunohost server, one “testing” yunohost server to test services that I don’t know if I’ll use yet (and I wouldn’t want them to interfere with production e.g. by using too many resources)
and one server without yunohost for mailu, Docker, traefik, etc, which I can use to deploy services the correct way™ as I figure out the services that I really use and find the time to migrate them one-by-one
Even when using yunohost, there are so many things to do after deploying a service (e.g. DNS, configure the server and client software), so it has been really useful to save time when deploying and configuring.
I think it gets you ~80% there, makes self-hosting accessible to everyone, and helps democratize the Internet a bit 💚 It’s more important to have many people setting up e.g. Immich or Nextcloud for their family photos, than only a few Linux people being able to learn how to do it perfectly (Docker/kubernetes high availability, reverse proxies, etc) and have everyone else to need to resort to using centralized services


Lemmy’s license is AGPL, so you would need to at least publish changes to Lemmy itself 😉
(I don’t know if e.g. the code for the algorithm is separate, in order to have a closed source algorithm with an open source Lemmy fork)
Community declines Oracle proposal for using MySQL