Creating your own cloud, look at the infrastructure
Without a server, you won’t do much. At the end of this post, you will have a server ready to rock Server: It might sounds obvious but to self host your own set of applications, you need a server. That’s probably the first choice you’ll have to make throughout your journey:
where do you host the server(s)? You have 2 possibilities:
- Host it at home: the only advantage is you have a direct access to your machine. A few things about this:
- real servers make real noises. Even if you think it’s cool because it feels pro, you don’t want this at home if you’re not living alone on an island, it can be very noisy. My advice is to keep it cheap and simple by using whichever hardware you already have (or buying a raspberry pie), you’ll know when you need more, until then, relax and don’t...
Beginning of our journey to self host applications on your own cloud
Side to side syntax of pacman compared to ubuntu
Petite selection Musicale
A desktop app to integrate all your web apps together
We’ll cover the implementation, query and reporting aspect
Deep dive into emacs: let’s unleash the power
Look at a few interesting features that comes by default
Emacs builtin features
Emacs builtin features
Getting started with org mode
Getting started with emacs: the basics
The learning path
4 great cli tools you should know about: tmux, tig, htop, emacs
Because not everyone know how to do it
Petite selection musicale
A HTML/CSS skeleton to quickly get started with your project