diff options
author | mms <michal@sapka.me> | 2024-09-08 21:11:01 +0200 |
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committer | mms <michal@sapka.me> | 2024-09-08 21:11:01 +0200 |
commit | 5bb2e8a0b82e06008587f375b0bdf78c7c4b799f (patch) | |
tree | 76271d8da7cc2c029239e5c06e7a898e344cb204 /content | |
parent | 5d101286868730873292588d4e15aeb13af6bd28 (diff) |
feat(blog): self host?
Diffstat (limited to 'content')
-rw-r--r-- | content/blog/2024/should-i-self-host-this-site.md | 43 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | content/brain-rot/fantasy/chronicles-of-amber/hand-of-oberon-1976.md | 27 |
2 files changed, 70 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/content/blog/2024/should-i-self-host-this-site.md b/content/blog/2024/should-i-self-host-this-site.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b0cae82 --- /dev/null +++ b/content/blog/2024/should-i-self-host-this-site.md @@ -0,0 +1,43 @@ ++++ +title = "Should I self-host my site?" +author = ["Michał Sapka"] +date = 2024-09-08T21:07:00+02:00 +categories = ["blog"] +draft = false +weight = 2001 +image_dir = "blog/images" +image_max_width = 600 +abstract = "A genius idea?!" ++++ + +Up until recently, I was sure that my upload is limited to 20MB. +I was wrong - it's 40MB, and (if Ubiquity is to believed), it's _stable_ 40MB. +Way more than my low-traffic sites need. +If we don't count the bots, it's a few dozen people every day. + +As I wrote [recently](/blog/2024/desktop-nas/), I am thinking about getting a dedicated compute server. +Playing with Synology is effective, but it's no fun at all. + +But then another idea came: I have an unused Raspberry PI4. +Sometimes my genius scares me. +This little fella is _way_ more than a FreeBSD server serving just this site needs. + +This would lead to separating my sites even more, like + +- _unix-history_ becomes unixhist.<domain> +- _brain-rot_ becomes brainrot.<domain> + +I have to say, that just thinking about it makes me smile. +What's sexier than an elf princess's swo... self-hosted site? +And dedicating RPi would delay purchasing a full-blown thin-client PC, which would be "I have all the power now" moment. + +This raises a few concerns: + +- I have a dynamic IP. I can use a dynamic DNS service, but maybe a relayd on my current OpenBSD Amsterdam can be used? +- Can I be doxed? I mean, you could simply WHOIS me, so most likely not a risk? +- With all the bots out there which can kill any server, would I be DDOSed all the time? +- How do I start every sentence with "btw, I host my website in my living room". + It's already difficult enough to put Emacs and BSD there! + +Hosting a website is infinitely less complex than doing it for E-mail, so it's as close to a cakewalk as it gets. +If you can help me with those questions, please do. diff --git a/content/brain-rot/fantasy/chronicles-of-amber/hand-of-oberon-1976.md b/content/brain-rot/fantasy/chronicles-of-amber/hand-of-oberon-1976.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c97ec6e --- /dev/null +++ b/content/brain-rot/fantasy/chronicles-of-amber/hand-of-oberon-1976.md @@ -0,0 +1,27 @@ ++++ +title = "Hand of Oberon (Roger Zelazny, 1976)" +author = ["Michał Sapka"] +categories = ["brainrot"] +draft = true +weight = 3004 +image_dir = "brain-rot/screenshots" +image_max_width = 765 +abstract = "My short revoew" +rating = 4 +image = "brain-rot/covers/hand-of-oberon.jpg" +[menu] + [menu.brain-rot-fantasy-amber] + weight = 3004 + identifier = "hand-of-oberon-roger-zelazny-1976" ++++ + +The plot tickens! +We end where we left of: turns out that Amber is the home of the original Pattern, which is badily damaged and we need to fix it. + +I think I start to understand why I find _Chronicles_ so particular, yet I can't put it away. +The volumes here are not volumes with and beggining and end. +It's closer to modern day TV, where you get an interesting hook at the end, the middle is ok-ish but the end makes you hungry for the next episode. +As much as I hate that _binge-watching_ formula, I have nothing against it here. +Fantasy books rarely make anyone rich, but a man's gotta eat. +The length of each volume here also doesn't make it any worse, as they all about 200 pages long. +Brandon Sanderson's signature is longer than that. |