

Do you know how any of this works?
Do you know how any of this works?
Right? I just want to self-host something like Google and all their services, but free. It also has to run on an AMD K6-2 with 1GB of DDR1 RAM and under 20GB for storage. Please don’t ask me any questions, I know exactly what I’m doing.
Have you looked at Ghost?
If you don’t have a uniform infrastructure, nobody will want to use your spare compute you have lying around.
Every hosted solution already has free tiers and free CI runners, so the question is why would they pay you for the privilege?
I don’t mean to put your efforts down, but I’m so confused about what this is. I listened a bit, and it seems to be just you musing about your experience with certain things. I think people show up to listen to podcasts for an objective viewpoint about X topic, and not just somebody moving from topic to topic and talking about their wants and needs about a certain thing.
I’m also very confused on what “Linux Prepper” means. What are you preparing for?
Well if “it shouldn’t take much”, then it shouldn’t be hard to find a solution, right?
I’m now wondering why you’re here asking this question if you fully understand what you’re asking about.
That just covers voice/video. OP is asking about a lot more.
There is no way to do what teams does without significant infrastructure. Same with Slack and others.
If you want something that just gets close to the mark, look at Jitsi. It’s about as complete as you could expect for just video/voice.
What you may not understand about conferencing platforms is that they are dozens of different hosted services working together to provide a cohesive UE. Video, SIP, VOIP, auth, identity…these are all separate services that are deployed as microservices to get what you get. If you find the bare minimum of the services you actually need, you can probably cobble something together, but it’s not going to be a simple running of one service to get the same experience.
This isn’t a clear question about what you’re trying to confirm here.
Are you wondering how you pull a confirmed container from a confirmed provider?
Are you concerned about supply chain attacks?
https://docs.romm.app/latest/Platforms-and-Players/Supported-Platforms/
Seems Windows is listed as supported.