This does look great. I'd love to see a free "home lab" license option without having to sign up for something or create an account. The information on your pricing page could use more detail on the "Did you know? You can start with a free open-source membership through our Members Portal" section.
ferngully
It's a good idea. Also, domains are pretty cheap so I feel it a worthwhile yearly expense.
I've used addy.io for years and never had a site reject my alias. But I might do things differently than you. I own two domains for emails. My main one that is configured with Mailbox.org. And my secondary domain has its MX records set for addy.io. So when I create an alias I just make it at [email protected]. This is probably why I've never seen a service block me. I have seen lists on GitHub for companies to use in their code to block alias emails, and addy.io was in there. Are your aliases generated using their domains?
This is not an original iPhone. They didn’t come in gold, nor had the antenna bar under the camera running across the back. Looks like an iPhone 6 . Still old photo though.
Is this only for music, or tv shows as well? I find myself shuffling shows a lot and it was nice in Plex to have a smart playlist and exclude shows that had been played in the last X days from the playlist.
I just finished this book over the weekend. It was fun.
I went through this a bit ago. The calibration of your pace is set during an outdoor run. Try and do one or two outdoor runs at the same pace as the treadmill and it should adjust.
Anyone know who this girl is?
You should only have to backup the Postgres database. But it won’t hurt to have a copy of your compose file as well.
This GitHub issue has the steps you should use. And answers all your other questions too.
I think your approach to monetizing towards companies is great and you should totally do that. As someone that works with an RMM everyday and I've tried nearly all the big box ones. They all suck. So seeing something new in this space is great. Especially if it works.
I think restricting the home lab level to 1-3 sites could be a viable path? Maybe even license agreement stating not to be used for business without subscription (you might already do this, I didn't read the license)? I'd expect that to be hard to enforce though.
I did read a bit about the self compiling and think that's a good idea and totally could have signed up with an alias email. But for me, when I want to test something I want it to be a quick docker/k3s deploy. Could you publish your docker containers for home lab, maybe restricting bare metal installs to a license would deter companies from installing due to most in house IT wanting things on VMs or bare metal.