[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This reminds me of my posts on reddit 3 months prior, it all started with Noob here🤣, so even I am a noob. Or you can say you are on Lemmy and not reddit, so I wont call you or myself a noob anymore, as noobs are still on reddit😉.But we all learn bits with time. I read those posts too, but gave it a shot anyway and its been 4 months of using Duplicati, still running without any issues.

I do randomly test it as well, but copy/pasting my stuff and then deleting it from original location, and use Duplicati to restore and works well everytime. I did those tests every 7days for 1st month, but after that it has been 3 months where I do similar tests randomly either 20 days or monthly. And still doing good.

Key part to remember while Duplicati is Versioning, I keep atleast 5 versions of backup (daily backups), and the things I backup are mainly Photos or password manager data. So even if I get a corrupted back up and even lose my system. I'll still have the 4 other backups which ain't very old, as its daily backups with 5 versions so, 1 backup per day for last 5 days. So 90% chances are I won't lose the data, but in case even if I do it would negligible.

[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago

No as I shared I only use a remote machine (which is my old laptop converted to NAS) (2nd house is a dream as of now 🙈)

On a serious note as Duplicati backups can be encrypted, you can use remote Machine, backup to a machine in 2nd house as Syncthing works over relays for remote locations as well, or you can also send encrypted backups to cloud like Gdrive, Dropbox, etc.

[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

True, it also requires login aa the very first step which makes it communicate with PlexServers, so it not fully selfhosted neither fully private.

[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

here you are wrong. The very first step in Plex is having a user account not local but on Plex (of course that is going to their servers). So the very 1st step shows it is not fully selfhosted. Neither it is fully private.

[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 year ago

Glad to know, I was able to help ya avoid that cost. We should be thanking the Dev's baby, as it helped us all to protect our privacy and our pockets 🤣.

[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 1 year ago

I follow the rule of 3 for backups. So I keeps 3 copies of things I like to back up.

  1. Original (Drive 1)
  2. Duplicati backups (Sent to drive 2 - Same Machine)
  3. Using Syncthing I sync The Backup Folder in Drive 2 to a remote Machine
[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Is you like to run Multiple OS/VMs on single machine, then Proxmox is your goto, hands down.

CasaOs is more for people like me, who runs a single OS baremetal and like to have multiple docker instances on that same OS. Basically you need a baremetal Debain or supported Linux OS on which you install CasaOS.

CasaOs is more like portainer on steroids, as it offers you Appstore like interface to get one click Docker container installation. But also offers you control (for more advanced users) where if you like you can manager containers and can have terminal/ssh access along with option to change default volume maps set by CasaOS.

One such similar thing to CasaOS is UmbrelOS, please do avoid that, as it only offers one click installations of docker containers with default volume maps (with no way for you to change it) And it lacks all the advanced features to manage containers like in CasaOS. Atleast CasaOs keeps those options hidden away, so once you become a little advanced you can access it.

[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago

Is you like to run MultipleVMs on single machine, then Proxmox is your goto, hands down.

CasaOs is more for people like me, who runs a single OS baremetal and like to have multiple docker instances on that same OS. Basically you need a baremetal Debain or supported Linux OS on which you install CasaOS.

CasaOs is more like portainer on steroids, as it offers you Appstore like interface to get one click Docker container installation. But also offers you control (for more advanced users) where if you like you can manager containers and can have terminal/ssh access along with option to change default volume maps set by CasaOS.

One such similar thing to CasaOS is UmbrelOS, please do avoid that, as it only offers one click installations of docker containers with default volume maps (with no way for you to change it) And it lacks all the advanced features to manage containers like in CasaOS. Atleast CasaOs keeps those options hidden away, so once you become a little advanced you can access it.

[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I was searching for a Lemmy Instance in that mix 😅

[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 13 points 1 year ago

Yes its basically selfhosted Google Photos instance kinda thing. There is a great story the Dev shared once, he was paranoid about backing up things to Google or Apple cloud as they have history of sharing it with Feds. So Dev won't like his family pictures on such platforms, so when him and his partner were to have a baby, he started working on immich, so by the time baby arrives he'll have a safe platform to backup family pictures.

[-] fedonr@lemmy.dbzer0.com 13 points 1 year ago

True for users who are already setup with Plex, for them there is no reason to switch as of now, but for a person starting from scratch and setting up things for the first time, it makes a lot of sense to get Jellyfin instead of going Plex. As Plex is moving away from their core of making user's media available for streaming, and rather focuses in pushing its own streaming content (I know we can toggle that behavior off but it is headache fot new comers, and it should be off by default and if a person likes they can turn on Plex's streaming content, default should be the user's content)

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fedonr

joined 1 year ago