I completely agree. If you’re not doing something in the realm of Arcane or Spiderverse, don’t bother.
I completely agree. If you’re not doing something in the realm of Arcane or Spiderverse, don’t bother.
Wow. What am I reading.
And you can always send me a question if you run up against something. I’m not an expert by any means but I’ve made it my daily driver for a couple years now.
I don’t feel like the Linux communities were really a friendly space in the early 2000s. And the Ubuntu forums felt like they became powerful in 2010. I played around with Linux briefly in 2005 and felt like there wasn’t much support for solving certain issues.
And when in doubt, ask chatgpt. It may give you a wrong answer but it can point you in the right direction.
Now you have the internet and arch wiki.
I love it, it works. Running a server is super easy and the speed is quite nice for a free piece of software.
They apologized and admitted that it was a dumb thing to do.
Why is this behavior default if it confounds so many people?
That just blew my mind.
And now he’s Henry Warhammer. The gods smile on him us.
It may have been me both times. I went down a deep AD hole recently, and was trying to find an easy open source way to do it.
My advice is to put whatever you choose into a vm and snapshot it right before you configure the AD. I think I reconfigured mine 8 times before I was happy.
Samba v4 has been able to be a domain server forever and it’s free. You can also use Synology if you want it off the shelf.
Not the original commenter, but I don’t understand how that would increase your attack surface. The AD is inside the network, and if an attacker is already in, you’re compromised. There might be way to refrence a DNS server with a windows server, but then you’re running windows and your life is now much more difficult.
As per DNS, the AD server must be the DNS provider. If you run something like nethserver in a VM you can use it as a dns & ad server.
The domain thing, the AD server is the authorative for its domain. So if you set it as top level, like myhouse.c()m, it will refrence all dns requests to itself, and any subdomains will not appear. The reccomended way to get around this is to use a subdomain, like ad.myhouse.c()m. Or, maybe you have a domain name to burn and you just want to use that?
I am, and I’m using Neth Server. I use it only for an AD, TrueNAS for file storage and a few VMs, portainer for applications. It was for practice, but Neth makes it so easy, why not? And it can help with some LDAP applications (but I haven’t set them up yet)
I was coming here to post this.
Hmmm, maybe I need to dig in settings. When Apple Arcade became a thing I found new apps on the Home Screen. I still think it’s the only streaming box outside of a shield that is appropriately powered amass doesn’t serve ads. And unlike the shield, Apple tv has a clear future.
It still clutters on OS upgrades.
Because people won’t pay for it. We are in the minority.
Interesting. I’ve actually had the opposite experience. Jellyfin has been smoother and more reliable than Plex. Maybe it’s worth checking out Emby, I think it solves the fast client switching (but I’m not entirely positive). I’ve just taken to running both. When I hit Plex snags I pop over to Jellyfin.
Paywall