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Triton

Triton@lemm.ee
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From their terms of service:

They (private repos) are also allowed for really small & personal stuff like your journal, config files, ideas or notes, but explicitly not as a personal cloud or media storage.

I’d guess that most private git repositories are small enough to fall under this category (unless you track large non-text files in git). This also seems like a very reasonable policy, considering that they’re a non-profit and they want to focus on supporting open source projects.

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This might be what you’re looking for. When translating between languages other than English (German - Spanish in my case) the data can be a bit lacking but it generally works really well.

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I’m using nebula to remotely access the raspberry pi in my home network and it mostly just works. The dual setup for nextcloud might be a bit more tricky, at least if you want to use HTTPS. You’ll probably have to set up a reverse proxy in Nginx for at least one of the routes, since they need different certificates (although since Nebula already authenticates and encrypts your traffic, HTTPS is probably not necessary there).

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From the “methodology” page:

The more a country was perceived to exemplify a certain characteristic in relation to the average, the higher that country’s attribute score, and vice versa.

Both the title of this post as well as the title of the article (“These Countries Have the Strongest Militaries”) are misleading at best since they just compare which countries are associated with having a strong military by the people they surveyed. I’ve never seen any reputable source claim that Russia’s military is comparable to that of the US, let alone superior.

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Das Problem der Betriebskosten löst man mit dezentralen Messengern aber auch nicht. Pro Nutzer werden die Betriebskosten da tendenziell noch höher sein und viele Leute spenden wahrscheinlich auch eher an eine bekannte Organisation wie die Signal Foundation als an einen kleinen unabhängigen Serverbetreiber.

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The problem seems to be that home.stateVersion is not set because you commented out both the declaration in flake.nix as well as the line that imports home.nix. It’s a bit difficult to see whether the config is otherwise fine since there is a lot of visual clutter due to all the commented-out lines.

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First, you need to pass the plasma-manager input to your home-manager config in some way. I use the NixOS module for home-manager which I declare like this in my flake.nix (if you have a different setup, this might not be necessary or you have to do it in a slightly different way):

homeManagerModule = {
  imports = [home-manager.nixosModules.home-manager];
  home-manager.users.myusername = import ./home.nix;
  # This will give us access to the inputs in the home-manager config
  home-manager.extraSpecialArgs = {inherit inputs};
};

Now the home-manager config (in my case home.nix) can look like this:

{
  inputs,
  ...
}: {
  imports = [inputs.plasma-manager.homeManagerModules.plasma-manager];
  programs.plasma = {
    enable = true;
    # ...
}

You probably forgot to import the plasma-manager module into home-manager. If you want to have a cleaner setup, I’d also recommend against just copying the complete output of rc2nix into your config since it tends to contain a lot of unnecessary stuff. What I usually do is:

  1. Store the current config in a file, i.e. rc2nix > old-config.nix
  2. Make whatever changes I want in Plasma in the graphical settings app
  3. Store the updated config in a new file, i.e. rc2nix > new-config.nix
  4. Get the difference, i.e. diff old-config.nix new-config.nix and add what I want to my actual plasma-manager config.

This of course only works if you’re starting from a relatively unmodified installation of KDE, but in that case it’s worth the effort imo.

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Selbst bei einer Dividende von 2.500 Euro ändert sich für die untere Hälfte der Bevölkerung nichts am Vermögen. Arme Menschen würden das Geld der Simulation zufolge für bislang ungestillte Konsumbedürfnisse ausgeben, anstatt es zu sparen. Ihr Vermögen wüchse also nicht, der Wohlstand aber schon.

Was ist denn das für ein Argument? Es geht ja nicht darum, dass alle Menschen am Ende möglichst viel Geld in ihrem Bankkonto anhäufen, sondern dass ihr Lebensstandard sich langfristig verbessert. Abgesehen von den (vermutlich nicht allzu vielen) Leuten, die um ein Unternehmen zu gründen oder eine extrem teure Ausbildung zu bezahlen viel Geld auf einmal brauchen, ist eine einmalige Geldspritze dafür ja vermutlich nicht das effektivste Mittel.

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That can be a good solution at least if electricity costs are not a big deal. If power is expensive in your area, it might be worth to buy something more power-efficient, like a raspberry pi (assuming they’re not completely sold out right now).

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No company is just going to host a server for you for free, a (virtual) server for running nextcloud will cost you at least a few bucks a month. As others have already said, you can run a server at home on your own hardware, but this is also not free (hardware cost, electricity, etc.) and you will additionally have to deal with any hardware issues & replacements yourself.

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