jgkawell
@jgkawell@lemmy.world
- Comment on Best easy to use e-commerce front end with no javascript? 4 months ago:
That’s definitely its focus, but if you want a very simple store it does support payments: ghost.org/help/ecommerce/
- Comment on Best easy to use e-commerce front end with no javascript? 4 months ago:
If you’re willing to accept JavaScript I’d recommend a Ghost setup. Pretty good platform once it’s set up and easy to selfhost. Not sure you’ll find a platform without JS for your use case tbh.
- Comment on Which RSS aggregator do you use? I cannot seem to find one that works for me. 6 months ago:
I use yarr as well but forked it to use postgres as the database instead of sqlite: github.com/jgkawell/yarr
- Comment on Read You (RSS client) 0.9.12 released with support for FreshRSS & gReader API 9 months ago:
F-Droid apps typically lag behind GitHub releases because their build pipelines are different. So in this case the latest version (which supports the freshrss API) isn’t available on F-Droid yet.
- Comment on Planning on setting up Proxmox and moving most services there. Some questions 10 months ago:
Thanks for the link! I’ve been running Proxmox for years now without any of the issues like the previous commenter mentioned. Not that they don’t exist, just that I haven’t hit them. I really like Proxmox but love hearing about alternatives. One day I might get bored and want to set things up new with a different stack and anything that’s more free/open is better in my book.
- Comment on How safe is self-hosting a public website behind Cloudflare? 10 months ago:
If you have any issues or questions feel free to DM me here. I’d be happy to help out :)
- Comment on How safe is self-hosting a public website behind Cloudflare? 10 months ago:
I’ll let folks with more security experience dive into your specific question, but another option is to host your website on something like Github pages (using a static website generator like Jekyll and point Cloudflare at it. That way you don’t need anything pointed at your local network, get the uptime of Github, and still benefit from your own domain name.
That’s what I’m doing with my own blog and it’s been great. Github provides the service for free but if they ever charge for it I’ll just start hosting it locally.
- Comment on Port Forwarding Alternative? 11 months ago:
Yeah I have AT&T and had to set up IP passthrough on their router/gateway box. Basically it makes it so the ISP provided router acts as if it isn’t there and my router gets to do whatever it wants.