Isn’t this a little late?
Isn’t this a little late?
I would say that “on prem” defines a location, “selfhosting” an action. You can do both at the same time, e.g. selfhosting nextcloud onprem.
Apparently, it is not only my oberservation, but the article says similarly:
The inconsistent approach to backward compatibility in decades past may also have played a part.
However, I’m not a db admin and my perspective might be biased (infosec).
I would say that this is a sign of a bad product. Apparently, compatibility between SQL server versions is not great.
Probably overkill, but for projects like this I’ve setup WordPress in the past. Once everything was done, I converted the WordPress page to a static site with httrack and use the static version.
This gives the ease of setting up and editing combined with the stability and security of a static HTML website.
While you can probably use them for some small tasks (like a switch, a file server with a USB thumb drive or a print server), you’re probably better off if you can sell them and buy a raspberry pi or similar.
The Fritzbox 7530 for example could be sold for 50€ (at least in my country).
Thanks for the thoughtful answer, but my question was actually meant as a joke.
Can someone create a list of the most secure 4-digit PINs?
I can’t imagine how this incident you noticed is connected to the root server issue.
As long as there are no relevant changes in the root zone (and according to the article, there were none) this root server issue was likely without impact.
Badly. Nextcloud is a very active project with many plugins and integrations. You can even integrate a mail system and AI image tagging, chat and video calls.
Owncloud focussed more on the enterprise sector and less on fancy features. Definitely the more stable product (but not only in the positive sense).
Great tool for documenting your setup. I use this at work a lot