Is it worth stating which companies own which vpns? I saw a TIL that mentions a select few companies own most VPNs
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I think they mean powerline adapters
abominable_panda@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Yet another note taking recommendation neededEnglish
1·1 month agoI have joplin but personally found myself using Nextcloud Notes 100% of the time. I just need very basic, quick markdown notes
Ticks all your boxes
Raspberry Pi:
- Install wireguard (as a server)
- Set up a peer/client config
- Open wireguard port on the router
MiniPC:
- Install wireguard (as a client)
- Add server config and connect to server
- Verify connection
- Ensure connect on boot
Points to note:
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Configure them both locally and ensure you have a connection before you move the pi to another country
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If you’re behind a CGNAT on one network, that’ll change some things. That network will have to be the client. (If both are behind CGNAT, you’re out of luck and cant use this - will have to be tailscale or other method)
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If using a domain name make sure its always pointing to your ip (in case it’s not static)
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I think if you set allowed ip as 0.0.0.0/0 on the client it’ll route all traffic.
Edit:
Saw your comment about just having qbt use the vpn. Check this guide out
abominable_panda@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Public vs. Private synched photo managementEnglish
0·4 months agoSyncthing or rsync?

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