FOSS geek, privacy and digital freedom advocate, cypherpunk, mental illness advocate, RPG enthusiast, coffee lover.

Pronouns: He/they

I’m neurodivergent, namely autism/ADHD.

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Joined 1 month ago
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Cake day: September 28th, 2024

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  • Yup. I was reading one of them and I was like wow. It kind of makes me wish I had experienced that tech era in the early 90s, but I was only a toddler at the time. Today we have Tildes (https://tildeverse.org/) that try to resemble that old BBS community vibe.

    In the first volume of the BBS magazine I have available there, I was surprised with how many women were involved in the BBS scene. There were at least three women who were column authors in that issue and one woman on the BBS development team (they have a photo in the beginning of the issue). I’m sure they had to contend with even worse casual sexism and misogyny in those communities than there is today. Nowadays it seems like more men are aware of the sexism we’ve internalized and are trying to be better.


  • I see what you mean. As far as I’m aware, I think that’s builtin to the web server software. So it’s not something you can change in Nginx to make it look like Caddy, nor can you modify Caddy’s configuration. I think the most Caddy does is change the background colors and font colors to match the user’s browser’s preference of light or dark mode, but this is builtin to the source code, so you can’t modify the colors unless you fork Caddy and change the source code yourself.


  • The page design of the directory listings are built in to the web server software. So this isn’t something you can add to Nginx or Apache. There is a way to change the appearance of how files from the directory listing are displayed, but you’d need to use PHP or JavaScript with CSS or something to implement a front-end for it, and it wouldn’t be anything you’d add to the web server configuration. If you look at https://beta.the-eye.eu/public/, they are using JavaScript and CSS to implement a dynamic front-end for the directory listing.






  • I self host my own website, blog, and a dozen privacy-friendly alternatives and front-ends to various web sites. I use a dedicated remote server for this, so nothing is on my own bare metal. netcup.de has a variety of VPS options that give you good hardware resources for your money. You can get a VPS with 8 GB of RAM, 4 core CPU, 256 GB disk, and 2.5Gbps network throughput for $6.33 a month (not including initial setup cost). Compared to what Vultr and Akamai offer for the same price, this is a steal. The company is based in Germany, so you have to convert the euro prices to US dollars if you’re in the US. The only thing about netcup.de is that your options for the location of your server are limited. They have one US location and the rest are in Europe. This is not a dealbreaker for me, though. And they guarantee 99% uptime. I’m pleased with their service. If you just want to host your personal services on a more long term basis and don’t care about scaling and deployment turnover, then netcup is great. Akamai, Digital Ocean, and Vultr are more for short term disposable, scalable VPSes or web apps and they have excellent data center availability.