

For that, you’ll need to either have it behind a reverse proxy and port forward appropriately that way, or port forward directly to the IP address you’re using now.


For that, you’ll need to either have it behind a reverse proxy and port forward appropriately that way, or port forward directly to the IP address you’re using now.


Being able to manage it through a gui web interface is definitely nice. I love how simple it is to work with.


Is the IP address you’re trying to connect to correct? It’ll either be one assigned by Docker, or it’ll just the the IP address of your host machine.
On your Ubuntu host, type “ip addr” (no quotes) in the terminal and try that address. If you have not configured the Ubuntu host’s IP address to be statically assigned, or set up a DHCP reservation for that address you should do that as well so the address doesn’t change in the future.


I’ve used a fair number of them from Amazon, they all have worked in any browser. I think I might have had to manually specify http and not https for setup though.


If you don’t plan on having it save passwords, you can add the following to the .desktop file your using for the Exec line:
–password-store=basic
The line for my chrome setup for some public computers at work is:
Exec=/usr/bin/google-chrome-stable --password-store=basic %U
So you’d just need to replace the file path to your chromium path and it should work.


Windows 11 actually released 3.5 years ago!


Do you have any client recommendations? I’ve tried Kavita and I liked the web app, but having a dedicated 2-way syncing client would be nice!


Windows updates don’t work correctly a lot of the time if you’ve bypassed the requirements. My predecessor at work installed 11 on some ancient systems and it’s been a hassle.


I am so lucky to live near a Microcenter.


I have my own domain and pay for Zoho to host my email. It works well aside from the occasional site that refuses to accept my email as valid because it’s not a .com/org domain.


I had a rebranded clevo back in 2009. It worked great for a few years before the dedicated gpu died. It was a sleek design (especially for the time) too.


I’m dealing with a fair bit of this because my predecessor had the brilliant idea to put windows 11 on unsupported hardware (which I’m actively working on getting replaced). Every time I think I’ve found the last stupid thing they did, I find more janky shit like that.


To Brother’s credit, this is also true for their windows drivers. As an IT admin, anytime I need a new printer they’re my preferred brand.


My parents are using a 3rd gen i7 and it works fine. My brother has a few computers, one is a 2nd gen intel, but I think he put Linux on that one. My home server was running on my 4th gen i7 until I upgraded it to my second gen Ryzen earlier this year after I upgraded my gaming.


I’m using Zoho. It’s pretty cheap and wasn’t hard to set up with my domain.


There’s a setting Teams, under “Files and Links” where you can change it from Edge to Default Browser. Scummy that it works that way, but you can work around it at least (for now anyway).


I do, mostly because it gives a different menu if you click that vs the start menu (it shows recently open programs). If I’m searching I generally just hit the windows key and type, but if I’m slouched and reaching for the mouse only it can be helpful. It’s not like it takes up a lot of space, I’ve got an ultrawide at work and dual 2560x1440 monitors at home.


Same! I went from a 2700x to the 7800x3d. I’ll probably upgrade in 4-7 years depending on my financial situation and the specs for new hardware.


On the positive side, if your vaultwarden server dies, the cached vault on any/all of your devices can be logged into and export the vault.
It makes me think of Enterprise, where they don’t have replicators but they do have protein resequencers, which can take waste matter and convert it into useful things, but they can’t do energy to matter conversion yet.