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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: February 17th, 2024

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  • I self host vaultwarden and its great. Its an easy self host, and in my experience, it has never gone down on me.

    That being said, my experience is anecdotal. If you do go the vaultwarden route, realize that your vault is still accessible on your devices (phone, whatever) even if your server goes down, or if you just lose network connectivity. They hold local (encrypted at rest) copies of your vault that are periodically updated.

    Additionally, regardless of the route you take you should absolutely be practicing a good 3-2-1 backup strategy with your password vault, as with any other data you value.








  • Caldera OpenLinux 2.2 somewhere around 2000. Ran that for a year or two until the PC it was on died.

    Next time I was able to run it was 2008ish on a pos dell laptop on which I installed Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy Heron). When that laptop died a year or so later I went macOS and was happy there until about 2022ish.

    Now I’m running it across several machines for different purposes.

    Arch dualbooting OpenSUSE Tumbleweed on my tinkering laptop.

    Ubuntu Server 22.04 on my server (started with 18.04)

    Fedora 41 on family computers/laptops

    Asahi on the last bit of Apple hardware left in the house

    Raspberry Pi OS on a number of PiS serving different purposes.










  • You can do this with the dd command. To prep:

    Set up a live boot USB stick with your distro of choice.

    Install another SSD/nvme/HDD at least the same size as your bookworm install into your bookworm machine. If that’s not an option connect a USB drive that’s at least the same size as the drive with your bookworm installation.

    Boot into the live USB on the bookworm machine.

    Make sure the partition(s) from your bookworm install are unmounted.

    Quadruple check the drives/devices for the dd command. Here’s the basics of the command:

    dd if=/device/where/bookworm/is/installed of=USB/or/second/drive/in/machine bs=8M status=progress

    So, if your bookworm install is on /dev/sda, and the USB or secondary is /dev/sdb, then the Cmand would be:

    dd if=/dev/sda of=/dev/sdb bs=8M status=progress