Selfhosted
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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My trusty Arch ISO has never failed me, and it's fairly easy to make one with a whole GUI if needed. But it's not really turnkey.
Other than that, Ubuntu is still a pretty nice distro to have if only for the fairly functional GUI and drivers out of the box. Works great for fixing stuff and browsing the web for answers.
Nice thing is with Ventoy you can have a whole bunch of them for all different needs!
I'll second ventroy. It actually just works.
I have a 256GB usb stick loaded with various install isos. It's great being able to just copy over the iso instead of having to image them every time I need one.
How does that work exactly? Do you partition the USB drive and make Ventoy bootable in one partition and then put the isos on the other partition or something?
It's been a while since I set mine up but iirc yes. Either that or ventoy creates a partition itself during install specifically that it searches to populate the list when you boot it. The nice thing beyond that is it even lets you explore other disks on the system. So if you have other isos on an unencrypted drive installed in the computer you can also browse to that and boot from it.
This is one of those things I didn't know I needed. I have so many usb sticks lying around with various troubleshooting isos. This is a game changer.
That's exactly how it works. And every time you boot to the USB drive you're presented a boot menu with a list of isos. You pick the iso you want and then it boots normally to that iso.
So it's two pieces of magic that make my life easy.
Its one of those things, once I started using it, I can't imagine how I worked without it.
Thank you for the sharing Ventoy! I'm excited to check it out!
Hah. What prompted this post was I actually just discovered ventoy and was looking for more images to put on there.
It seems like it can even do a Windows one for when I need to do odd 3rd party firmware update that of course doesn't support Linux.
This is the way. Since my switch to arch this has been the quickest way to get back up and running.
Before that, I’d used the gparted live image.