I’m confused, your post implied running unifi protect on your own hardware, but this link is about adding 3rd party camera streams into unifi protect.
Did I miss that?
Linux & Azure cloud engineer. Sometimes a wolf, or a fuzzy dragon.
I’m confused, your post implied running unifi protect on your own hardware, but this link is about adding 3rd party camera streams into unifi protect.
Did I miss that?
idk what nonsense the other commenter is posting but essentially your network flow should look like this:
internet user -> your IP (found via dynamic DNS) -> firewall/router DNAT port 443 -> proxy (nginx/caddy) listening on 443, backend set to port 80 -> vaultwarden port 80
You’d load your SSL certificate into the reverse proxy, I’m not familiar with caddy but I use nginx for this purpose.
Ubiquiti killed the bring-your-own-hardware option for unifi protect many years ago, unless you go down the road of hacking their app into a docker image.
hanging a light fixture above a kitchen island is pretty common, you can just drill some hooks into the stud.
I’m not the OP, report the post if you feel it’s in violation…
Nobody knows how to work around Microsoft BS better than Linux users.
CPU is pretty much irrelevant to GPU choice.
Personally I wouldn’t buy any recent intel CPU with the dishonesty and major flaws in their products as of late, but that’s up to you to decide - AMD’s most recent CPUs haven’t been amazing either, but don’t have hardware flaws at least.
Use Envision and an AMD gpu, works great.
Don’t use SteamVR, it’s trash on Linux - Valve for all their Proton work has ignored the Linux build of SteamVR for years.