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Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: June 3rd, 2025

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  • It’s more like switching to 15 other specialized stores which all value one’s privacy as opposed to the one which does everything and leverages its user data for maximum profit. No offence but comments like yours serve no purpose other than to impede non-tech-savvy people’s digital empowerment.

    Many of the services depicted here aren’t really in reach for the average user and that is a problem we cannot ignore. People aren’t too stupid to realize that switching E-mail addresses requires planning, but there are many hurdles that pave the way from something like Google Photos towards Immich, imho the most significant app category up there.

    So unfortunately you are correct. Transitions like that are extremely difficult especially after the decision has been made. Which makes it all the more important that we do not paint a picture of doom and gloom when the price of inaction is de-facto surveillance.


  • TDP is a very misunderstood concept these days because it used to be a hard upper limit but now it’s god knows what. The Spec Sheet is calling it “Processor Base Power”. What might that be you ask? Well of course it is

    The time-averaged power dissipation that the processor is validated to not exceed during manufacturing while executing an Intel-specified high complexity workload at Base Frequency and at the junction temperature as specified in the Datasheet for the SKU segment and configuration.

    In other words it’s just marketing mumbo jumbo. According to other users the N150 can draw as much as 20 up to 35 watts even. The fact that the heat is radiating well through your case sounds like a positive if anything. This is x86 we’re talking about. The added complexity of that architecture over ARM comes at a price.


  • I think that every platform will reach sort of an equilibrium during its lifetime. That relative “plateau” may last for months, years or even longer than that, but I think it will always be reached after its peak.

    imho the height of that peak and plateau speak to the overall popularity potential of the platform. Which is just that. A potential to attract masses. Whether maximizing this is a core goal is a different question.


  • I’d say monthly active looks pretty much stagnant. Of course we would all benefit from greater adoption.

    For me it was spezgate that brought me to abandon reddit. Yes, a platform is only as valuable as its userbase. Someone else here boiled it down to “quality over quantity”. I don’t expect this to be the final verdict on the trend.

    To me this is a lot like Linux vs Windows market share. Microsoft are currently doing everything in their power to enshittify Windows 11. But the endgame for a community first product like Linux isn’t to promote itself better towards potential switchers. People need to make that switch themselves.

    The big tech product will probably always “win” in terms of adoption, even if it is inferior in terms of its own merits. At the end of the day nobody wants to be Microsoft (reddit) in this analogy. And Apple (bsky) isn’t that much better.



  • You’re making a valid point. fwiw I wasn’t trying to advocate for my approach as a best practice I was just saying this is my reality thus far. (I think I’ve been on Vaultwarden for about 2 years now.)

    Watchtower itself basically just does “docker pull + down + up” for you, so whether that recreation of the container and any necessary migration work out is up to the software inside. One essential part of my infrastructure that I can think of where breaking changes did necessitate manual intervention was wg-easy my Wireguard container. But that just meant that I was stuck on an outdated version until I transitioned my compose file to get the new stuff. I can’t remember anything ever breaking through an unattended Watchtower update, which maybe I shouldn’t be saying out loud but oh well.



  • It’s a completely fair standpoint. You have to look out for your business first. I’m just the sysadmin trying to weigh some counterpoints because I deal with threat aversion and infrastructure hardening on a day-to-day basis.

    Once one has a solution that’s at least good enough people will usually stick with that, which is also fair. I know that the decisionmakers who pay my salary can’t have me follow every tech lead where my hourly wage goes to something that’s not a direct moneymaker.




  • Like I said in my other comment, Vaultwarden is probably not something you could set up yourself but it would basically give you the paid featureset of Bitwarden within all the Bitwarden apps and browser plugins at zero cost or whatever hosting it in the cloud would cost you.

    Personally I’d rather have my (albeit thoroughly encrypted) password data on hardware that I control than giving it to someone else. Data sovereignty is something you can’t really “buy” into. Whether your company can justify paying a freelancer or some specialist to do the initial setup is a different question which I think can be answered while imagining a worst case scenario of a company like Bitwarden or 1Password getting hacked. Passwords are never stored in plaintext of course but things like personal or credit card data for example can still get compromised when using a readymade subscription.


  • Interesting that the current version has this bug. I think around the time I started using Vaultwarden as my Bitwarden backend it was also said that the password-sharing should be treated as experimental, but I have had zero issues with it so far. The Web UI might not be super self-explanatory the first time round when it comes to sharing passwords with others but I mean as far as I know this is the work of a single Bitwarden-employee doing this in their free time. And once you have the org set up you don’t have to rely on the Web UI for any of the sharing, transferring, creating and whatnot anymore.

    If it is currently impossible to create new Organizations then I’m sure this week-old bug will be resolved fairly soon, probably with the next release.

    Either way OP said they’re not tech-savvy so they would probably need to hire someone to set this up for them, which I wouldn’t say is a ludicrous thing to suggest. Even with the level of encryption that this data is stored with you can never go wrong with the data sovereignty that comes with self-hosting. Once you have Vaultwarden in a Docker container with Watchtower updating it regularly it’s zero maintenance as far as I’m concerned.