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    • RE: Looking for a self-hosted file share tool

      What would you say NextCloud most resembles as far as a commercial product? Can it directly replace everything done by Dropbox, and/or Box, and/or Google Drive, OneDrive, etc?

      I am also migrating us off Box and originally was going to use OneDrive because we have Office365 until I learned that shared folders in OD can't even sync to computers, making it 100% useless as a file share tool.

      So along with this public uploading file share project, I'm also wanting to replace Box and OneDrive with a better company file share system.

      My biggest fear is self-hosting, I just don't want maintenance and support issues, I want things to be extremely robust, this is a twitchy company that tends to explode when our apps/services don't work right.

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Looking for a self-hosted file share tool

      @bnrstnr
      Good to know. Can you set up anonymous upload drops or does each user need an account?

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • Looking for a self-hosted file share tool

      Here are the requirements and use case.

      We want to be able to give anybody access to a folder where they can upload files to us. Sometimes these files will be large, like videos.
      The folders should be created as needed and only the person we give it to should have access. So Bob is given his Bob folder where he can create any number of subfolders and upload files to us as required. Then Jill is given her own folder, etc.

      On the backend, on our side, we should be able to see all the folders as one big drive, able to manage the files, download them, or even move them around.
      We should be able to quickly find the latest uploaded files and know who uploaded what and when.

      I know OwnCloud or NextCloud are top products in file sharing, they are on my list to test.

      I am currently testing something called ProjectSend.

      A few things I don't like about it though; it seems to store every file in a single /upload/files/ folder. Everything from all users just dumped in here with no subfolder structure. I don't even know what they do when multiple users upload files with same filename.
      There is no way to tell who uploaded what when browsing over SFTP for example.
      And in the backend interface, there is no way to select multiple files to download at once, which is really odd to me. This means when some client uploads stuff, there is no way to find just these files over SFTP, and if I look them up in the backend, there is no way to download them all at once.

      Another feature that would be very handy is the ability to create a upload drop where people can send us files on the fly without having any kind of account. Basically I just want to give them a link, and the link will open a page with an upload box. Later I can expire or delete the link.

      Essentially I'm trying to make it as easy and painless as possible to give our people some place to upload files to us. No account registrations, licensing/payment models, no fuss, no special software to install. Just a web page to upload stuff to us. At most, a user/pass if they will be working with us ongoing.
      And on the backend, we want to see all the files organized meaningfully so we can browse as if it were all just one folder, and be able to quickly copy those files to our workstations as needed.

      Most cloud drive tools focus all their energy on sharing things OUT, but rarely have I found one that easily allows to pull things IN. Out of 15 cloud drives I've run, only one allowed for an upload feature where I could have people send things to me. The whole purpose of what I'm looking for is to make it easy for people to send to me, not the other way around.

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Best backup and security for Android phones?

      @emad-r said in Best backup and security for Android phones?:

      @guyinpv

      regarding security how about something similar to linux, 2 user accounts.
      1 for admin stuff and 1 for user both pre passworded

      On Android phones?

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Flapping Laptop, Windows 10

      Hmm, a laptop? Maybe the wireless on/off key is actually sticking on the keyboard? A can of air might fix this mystery.

      posted in IT Discussion
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Flapping Laptop, Windows 10

      Tell power settings to not shut off the device to save power.

      15 years ago I might have wondered if there was IRQ conflicts or something. Other drives stealing same resources.

      Otherwise, it's not uncommon for networking to go out. There could have been a surge or something that make the electronics a bit wonky.

      posted in IT Discussion
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • Best backup and security for Android phones?

      I just got the wife a used Galaxy S7.
      I got myself a Pixel XL a year or so ago, and that came with unlimited cloud storage for images.

      What is the easiest/best to put on her phone for doing backups? She has 32GB onboard and a 64GB sdcard.

      I'd like to make sure her media and as much as possible, app data, is backed up. And keep the system running smooth.

      I'm not actually sure how much app data is stored by Google, if any. If an app has to be reinstalled, does Google save the app data?

      Doing something like being able to change phones without losing things like notes and progress through games, that data always gets lost.

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?

      Ok so clearly some kind of open Android device seems to be the most open for modification.

      What I don't get is the software. So Android is installed, then what? On the GooBank it doesn't say what is the actual media software.

      Is this just downloading something from the app store? If so, can I do this from any old Android phone or laptop? I happen to have an older Android tablet with an HDMI port, could I just use that and get a docking station and wireless remote or something?

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?

      @scottalanmiller said in Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?:

      @guyinpv said in Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?:

      @scottalanmiller said in Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?:

      @guyinpv said in Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?:

      Ok so Android TV.
      Seems like Nvidia Shield is most popular for connecting that.

      I have that and love it.

      So can I set it up so that dad turns it on and basically just has his 4 or 5 icons and that's it?

      No, I've not tried to simplify it. It's not bad, though.

      Others here said you can simply change the launcher, but on the Shield I don't know, maybe you can't change launcher from default system.

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?

      @scottalanmiller said in Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?:

      @guyinpv said in Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?:

      Ok so Android TV.
      Seems like Nvidia Shield is most popular for connecting that.

      I have that and love it.

      So can I set it up so that dad turns it on and basically just has his 4 or 5 icons and that's it?

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?

      Ok so Android TV.
      Seems like Nvidia Shield is most popular for connecting that.

      And then I can stick in a custom launcher entirely and just add the icons he needs?

      I didn't see Pandora in the Android TV appstore though. He does like radio sometimes.

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • Any options for a highly customized Roku-type device for daddy?

      My dad has a big TV but he is about as technical as a house cat. At least the cat can walk across a keyboard and make things happen! (ps my cat once selected all my desktop icons and sent them to recycle bin)

      He had a bluray player with apps on it for Netflix and such but it was always buggy, lost login info, disconnected often, lost wifi settings, etc.

      I personally have a Roku and that's cool and all but has a ton of apps and not all are free and some require accounts, monthly payments, or pay-as-you-go etc etc.

      What I'm looking for is a type of Roku where I am in control of it and I just put a big giant icon on there for netflix and one for youtube and one for physically stored music, videos, and pictures. If the stored files can come from built-in storage would be good, or like a USB drive.

      And then I want every other option stripped out and gone. No confusing menus, no extra icons, ads, apps he doesn't own and so on.

      What can make this happen?

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Fitness and Weightloss

      I've done a program called Whole30 for the last month. 10lbs off, a lot of bloat issues gone.

      Need to adjust diet and exercise program and go for another 10!

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now

      @jaredbusch said in Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now:

      @tim_g said in Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now:

      @guyinpv said in Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now:

      That's right. 9 steps to install it via Composer. All that worked except for forcing https which didn't work on my WAMP.

      I'm doing it again on cPanel but have to finish tomorrow.

      why don't you do it on Linux following JB's guide?

      Because this guy is worse than @Dashrender about doing things the hard way.

      That's funny. Their tutorial was far less hard than yours, and yours didn't cover my environment. But thanks anyway.

      I was on a WHM/cPanel setup on a VPS. While I did have SSH access as root, I used my cpanel user only at first. Apache and MySQL, not Nginx and MariaDB. But anyhoo.

      Problem 1: Changing documentroot for Apache. I had the host do this, even though I could do it from root. Otherwise use of /public folder wouldn't work. Anybody on a cPanel would have to do this. If the site is an "addon" domain, it's easy, but if it's the primary domain (as mine was), the process is a little more involved.

      Problem 2: I got a "No input file specified" blank page when trying to open it. This apparently had something to do with using fastCGI or PHP-FPM or something. Again the host made a server change, I believe all they did was turn off PHP-FPM. (this site is using PHP 7.2).

      Problem 3: After fixing that, the site was redirecting to the /login address but simply went to 404. To fix this, I had to do a bunch of Composer things, update Composer itself, global self-update, enable fopen urls until finally Composer had no warnings or errors when updating. When I first ran composer update, it downloaded everything and created the vendor folder, but apparently it still couldn't work because of version issues between Laravel and artisan and composer or some weird nonsense. I needed su ability to get composer updated here.

      Problem 4: Nothing worked yet, because when the host messed with PHP it generated a new htaccess file and left out all the stuff in the default one. I fixed that up.

      Problem 5: Site now loads without 404 error, but instead just throws a server 500. The Illuminate package had permission errors writing in the Storage folder even with 755 permissions. To fix this (as other suggested online), I set folders to 777.
      Then I had to run artisan cache:clear and composer dump-autoload. In general I always thought 777 was anathema but that's what everybody said to do.

      I finally got the freaking login after that.

      Problem 6: It still couldn't upload files to the uploads folder, so again had to go set 777. For the heck of it, I went and set bootstrap/cache to 777 too since that is the third folder they wanted to ensure write access. Now pictures could upload.

      Now finally the installation is working.

      Just by way of reference for anybody else who uses a cPanel setup. Composer was just there already on the VPS, but not up to date. And when using su, the Composer path is not set in globals so I had to reference full path.
      Documentroot needs changed (including addition config if using SSL).
      Potentially FastCGI issues. Some of this can be changed from WHM.
      Give full 777 folder permissions.

      Profit.

      posted in IT Discussion
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now

      That's right. 9 steps to install it via Composer. All that worked except for forcing https which didn't work on my WAMP.

      I'm doing it again on cPanel but have to finish tomorrow.

      posted in IT Discussion
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now

      @jaredbusch said in Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now:

      @guyinpv said in Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now:

      @jaredbusch said in Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now:

      @guyinpv said in Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now:

      It forces https? I just wanted to throw it up into WAMP but don't want to fart with trying to make SSL work on it.
      Any way to disable that and play with it without SSL?

      It absolutely does not use SSL by default.

      No idea what you did to think that.

      Now, I would never use it without SSL. But that is different.

      Interesting.

      After I installed it and got all the Composer packages updated and migrated the DB and all those things, ready to open it, it refused to open, it immediately redirects to https. I looked in htaccess files for any kind of redirect but didn't see it.

      What else could be making it switch to https on its own?

      Are you using my actual guide or the temp notes that were posted earlier in this thread?

      Actual Guide: https://mangolassi.it/topic/16471/install-bookstack-on-fedora-27

      I just followed regular old install instructions https://www.bookstackapp.com/docs/admin/installation/

      Everything worked fine up until opening it. But of course that could be due to who knows what goofy WAMP config with virtual host and all that.

      I'm now giving it another go on a dedicated cPanel on a VPS to see if that works better.

      posted in IT Discussion
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now

      @jaredbusch said in Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now:

      @guyinpv said in Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now:

      It forces https? I just wanted to throw it up into WAMP but don't want to fart with trying to make SSL work on it.
      Any way to disable that and play with it without SSL?

      It absolutely does not use SSL by default.

      No idea what you did to think that.

      Now, I would never use it without SSL. But that is different.

      Interesting.

      After I installed it and got all the Composer packages updated and migrated the DB and all those things, ready to open it, it refused to open, it immediately redirects to https. I looked in htaccess files for any kind of redirect but didn't see it.

      What else could be making it switch to https on its own?

      posted in IT Discussion
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Crypto Predictions

      @computerchip said in Crypto Predictions:

      @guyinpv said in Crypto Predictions:

      My knowledge of crypto is out of date by about 10 years. I used to mine when it pretty much only BTC, then I got into LiteCoin and DoggCoin etc.

      When my wallet became like a full gigabyte and I wanted a little processing power for myself, I kinda fell out of it.

      Now there are 1700 crypto coins and I don't have a clue what makes one "better" or "worse" than another. They are all just blockchain right? Or wallet services? Or fancy programs and apps that surround it?

      Why are there 1700 cryptocoins? What is still being discovered that makes one or another better? A cuter mascot?

      How are they solving some of the inherent problems with it? For example theft or wallets being lost or stolen? Those coins are just gone forever, never to be back in the market? This seems to me like a currency with an absolute max number of coins (and ability to lose them is not uncommon), available coins will simply dwindle over time.

      Is the problem of humongous wallets and processing power needed, solved? I don't want to lug around 10GB of the world's daily transactions on my computer all the time, or forget to open an app and have to wait 3 days for it to catch up with updates.

      With a decentralized nature of these systems, who do you complain to about bad transactions? Is there a refund system like credit cards have chargebacks? If someone steals from you can you complain to someone and get it back? Didn't used to be able to.

      Like I said, my knowledge is about 10 years old. I need a refresher and understand why so many, what are the real differences, what makes one better than another, how are wallets and security handled now?

      And I'm supposed to be a nerd and I can't keep on top of this. What are the chances the general public are ever going to care to learn or use it or anything else? Why I get change back from a store, I get dimes and nickles and dollars. I don't get a choice of 82 different currency variations with all different exchange rates.
      I don't see adoption happening until people can say, here, THIS one is "cryptocurrency". Try it. Not 862 variations, no doubt created by people hoping to win the lottery, take a bunch of coins early, hope it goes well so they can cash out later. I don't know.

      I stopped reading after you said your knowledge of crypto was 10 years outdated and when you said doggcoin.

      Well at least you're doing your part.

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Interesting Take On A Wiki - Testing Now

      It forces https? I just wanted to throw it up into WAMP but don't want to fart with trying to make SSL work on it.
      Any way to disable that and play with it without SSL?

      posted in IT Discussion
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
    • RE: Crypto Predictions

      My knowledge of crypto is out of date by about 10 years. I used to mine when it pretty much only BTC, then I got into LiteCoin and DoggCoin etc.

      When my wallet became like a full gigabyte and I wanted a little processing power for myself, I kinda fell out of it.

      Now there are 1700 crypto coins and I don't have a clue what makes one "better" or "worse" than another. They are all just blockchain right? Or wallet services? Or fancy programs and apps that surround it?

      Why are there 1700 cryptocoins? What is still being discovered that makes one or another better? A cuter mascot?

      How are they solving some of the inherent problems with it? For example theft or wallets being lost or stolen? Those coins are just gone forever, never to be back in the market? This seems to me like a currency with an absolute max number of coins (and ability to lose them is not uncommon), available coins will simply dwindle over time.

      Is the problem of humongous wallets and processing power needed, solved? I don't want to lug around 10GB of the world's daily transactions on my computer all the time, or forget to open an app and have to wait 3 days for it to catch up with updates.

      With a decentralized nature of these systems, who do you complain to about bad transactions? Is there a refund system like credit cards have chargebacks? If someone steals from you can you complain to someone and get it back? Didn't used to be able to.

      Like I said, my knowledge is about 10 years old. I need a refresher and understand why so many, what are the real differences, what makes one better than another, how are wallets and security handled now?

      And I'm supposed to be a nerd and I can't keep on top of this. What are the chances the general public are ever going to care to learn or use it or anything else? Why I get change back from a store, I get dimes and nickles and dollars. I don't get a choice of 82 different currency variations with all different exchange rates.
      I don't see adoption happening until people can say, here, THIS one is "cryptocurrency". Try it. Not 862 variations, no doubt created by people hoping to win the lottery, take a bunch of coins early, hope it goes well so they can cash out later. I don't know.

      posted in Water Closet
      guyinpvG
      guyinpv
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