

lol I started to reply, suggesting a recommendation feature to help find non-algorithmic tech feeds but then realized that’s exactly how all this started.


lol I started to reply, suggesting a recommendation feature to help find non-algorithmic tech feeds but then realized that’s exactly how all this started.


While I support the idea of using RSS readers to break free from algorithmic and/or AI curated feeds, I’ve mostly stopped bothering, since all the content that gets into the feeds has become algorithmic, AI slop.
There’s just no escaping it these days.


… documentation… released soon
On a project geared specifically toward helping the ignorant, documentation and admin guides are probably more important than code releases.
Non technical people will want to see and understand the process before they have to do the process, so don’t really on simple wizards to be your breakthrough to the masses.


yup, I even commented on the previous thread.
I’ll take a look at this safebox out of curiosity, but as I said in the previous thread, assuming this even meets OP’s goal, I expect the project to be another abandoned GitHub repo once the constant security maintenance cycles hit.
I’m generally of the opinion that OP’s target could be better met with well designed and well maintained walkthroughs of the most common use cases. There’s a ton of documentation and tutorials out there, but they’re all either terrible or unmaintained. A system that cross-linked and branched for the various up to date use cases like a choose-your-own-adventure book would be super.


lol Nix as the beginner friendly choice?
“very simple RAID?”
For someone who hasn’t even seen a command line before? Who doesn’t know what a RAID is? That’s the target audience here.
You’re entirely missing OP’s point here. You’ve reduced maintenance complexity, but increased the typical learning curve to get started.


missing a way to find out what they do without installing them
At the very top of the project page it says:
Termix is a web-based server management platform with SSH terminal, tunneling, and file editing capabilities.
Now you know what it does without installing it


You’re confusing a lack of handholding with gatekeeping.
beginner friendly solution, something with a UI, fewer manual configs…
First, you’re not entirely right. you can get a ton of self hosting done with things like Synology or Home assistant, and never see the complexity. You might get owned by a botnet, but it “works.”
Self hosting securely has a steep learning curve, there’s no way around that. What you’re asking for is for someone to write programs that’ll let you skip the learning curve.
GitHub is littered with abandoned attempts at doing this. You bury your lede by mentioning “your project” at the end. It’s your project going to be another well intentioned attempt that’s eventually abandoned or causes more problems than it solves?


At some point you had to learn all about debugging the overly-complicated and annoying OS that runs your full installs, didn’t you?


per the searxng container instructions:
Understanding container architecture basics is essential for properly maintaining your SearXNG instance. This guide assumes familiarity with container concepts and provides deployment steps at a high level.
The fact that you’re logging into your container to manually edit your config hints that you need to read more about managing containers.
Make sure you’re editing the file that you’re mounting on the host, and edit it from the host.
Have you checked the actual log with podman logs? It’ll tell you what it’s doing about its config.
Self signed for this use case is fine. you know and trust both ends of your connection, and no one else needs to know or trust either end of the connection.