I prefer to use products and services before inevitable enshittification, not after the curve. Refusing to use them won’t change their fate.
aspoleczny
It's definitely not the same thing. I do understand reservations behind usage free-tier services from Big Bad Corp., but I don't understand malicious reduction of valid arguments for usage of those services.
Again, attack targets end users, not Cloudflare tunnel operators: It abuses Cloudflare Tunnels as a delivery mechanism for malware payloads, not as a method to compromise or attack people who are self-hosting their own services through Cloudflare Tunnels.
This attack targets end users, not Cloudflare tunnel operators (i.e. self-hosters). It abuses Cloudflare Tunnels as a delivery mechanism for malware payloads, not as a method to compromise or attack people who are self-hosting their own services through Cloudflare Tunnels.
The author of this website is soooo full of himself he doesn't even notice how he bends reality to fit his point of view.
My daily is a cheap surface-like tablet, Chuwi Hi 10 Max with N100, that runs on Opensuse. The only thing that doesn't work are internal cameras, everything else is great. I can only assume Fedora would be the same.
I have this one from aliexpress with touch and I use it with cheap surface-like tablet (Chuwi HI10 MAX) and sometimes with Windows 10 desktop or Samsung Dex. It works with one usb-c cable or with mini-hdmi and power cable, colour rendering is acceptable, view angles are great. Unfortunately, although touch works great on desktop I can't configure it to work on linux tablet. As far as I know, it's impossible(?) to have two proper touch screens with Wayland.
Understandable. It's compromise I'm ok with, so that's why I mentioned this method.
I use cloudflare tunnel for this purpose. No open ports, no dealing with ISP, no exposing my IP.
I did, because of energy efficiency and quietness. But also I heavily compromised on the amount of space.
OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. Recently I bought cheap Surface-like x86 tablet on a rather recent hardware, and running Debian and its cousins required more tinkering than I was willing to do, so I decided to go with a more modern rolling release. Tried Arch for a few months, bricked it from mixing stable and testing branches, tried Fedora, and finally settled in Tumbleweed. I like it for being on the bleeding edge and exceptionally stable at the same time, perhaps thanks to robust OpenSUSE Build Service automated testing. And it is from a European company, that can't hurt.
No public server required at all
CF: Yes
frp: No
DDoS protection, WAF, and automatic SSL
CF: Yes
frp: No
Access controls and auth
CF: built-in Zero Trust
frp: manual setup of token/OIDC
Managed DNS
CF: Yes
frp: No
Built in security tools
CF: Yes
frp: No
Just like I said - prevalent reduction of valid arguments for usage of those services.