

This doesn’t even feel like an article - more like one long advertisement. The second paragraph of the article launches into a review of the “Erect Horse Penis - Concept LoRA”
This doesn’t even feel like an article - more like one long advertisement. The second paragraph of the article launches into a review of the “Erect Horse Penis - Concept LoRA”
I believe if you use a service like Google Voice you actually can block numbers. You can even set filters and play specific messages for different numbers (I sent “unknown” numbers to a recording that told them they need to unblock caller ID)
You’re already using an SMTP relay so why not host your Mail-in-a-box server at home? Been doing that for years. Also, check out Mailcow if you’re interested in running your server as a docker container.
The ISP is going to keep those important network security settings far away from its clients. Owning your own router or ONT will not let you change anything other than your internal network settings.
Are you able to log into your server using 3rd party apps like Jerboa?
Maybe web sockets aren’t setup properly for me on OPNSense NGINX. I’ll have to look into that. Could be that Jerboa needs websockets to log in?
I’m well aware of this. However, I am the only user on my instance and I’ve subscribed to all the communities I wish to view comments on. But the comments do not pull, or maybe just a few pull.
I did have a server set up without the second proxy on OPNsense and I was able to log in via Jerboa but the comments issue was still there. When I set up the current one I basically just copied all the settings from the first server so I doubt it’s config problems.
I’m guessing that my second proxy may be misconfigured. It’s hard for me to understand how some settings work because OPNsense uses a GUI to configure NGINX and it’s not as simple as copy and pasting from a .conf file.
TrueNAS virtualized under Proxmox with HBA card passed through. I don’t run apps on my NAS, it’s just for storage.
The whole internet can be ad free if you want it to be… even from your phone.
Fresh Graphene. In order to get stock Android back you would need to install it back on your phone. A factory reset removes all data, settings, and apps that were put on the phone by the user.