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Thorvid_botlakhan

Thorvid_botlakhan@kbin.social
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right?? so it’s not just my own impression…

I know I like tech stuff and I know i can get passionate and raise my skills on my own, but I could not find any good “beginner level” resource that didn’t step from a simple nice to get drawing of how things should be, to a complex mixmatch of services and settings that leaves me in doubt of what do i have to do in my instance…

Thanks for the link, i’ll check it out as i get back home…
Since you are on the same journey and know about any group chat or communities that are noob approachable, i’m all ears

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I may have express myself poorly, sorry, was in a rush.

I got the services running fine, am still learning and testing few things but the things I need or build are available and running on local.

My issue is about publishing them online, like linking them to a domain name I bough, and pointing that to my static home IP address, and the routing for each of them
like “cloud.myhomelab.net” to point to my home IP, and then reverse proxy that to the nextcloud instance at 192.168.1.127:8080 that is a proxmox container running docker containers

I followed some of dbtech’s tutorials, and tried via Porkbun and cloudflare tunnels, and just after posting this I saw that it finally propagated (after a looot of days) but can only reach one of the services I set up.

Another way i kinda heard about was not using cloudflare tunnels and redirecting the traffic to my static IP to an nginx container that then redirects the traffic inside my home lan but I really don’t know how to handle security with that, and also my ISP is blocking traffic on port 80 and 443 ( “it’s for our router firmware’s updates…” that were like 4 years ago last update )

All the idea of how to connect my local machines to the outside world and different method and secure proofing is soo difficult to understand for my, i really can’t wrap my head around on what does what

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goood!
Reddit behaved in such a horrible way, that I feel like API pricing was the least of the bad…

One could argue about their fairness and aim to destroy 3rd party apps, and I had already closed my accounts at that very step.

But the way they treated mods, forced subs to open and behaved like pure evil assholes, I really see how companies or more “official” subreddits with a touch of interest in their users, would feel the desire to leave and close bridges

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