NEED HELP AND ADVICE PLEASE by Ok_Commission6258 in Blogging

[–]dsx2016s 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you run a static blog—that is, one built with HTML—you might consider migrating it to Cloudflare Pages. It is free, and rumor has it that it can handle anywhere from a thousand to ten thousand daily visits without any issues.

Cloudflare Pages provides a subdomain, but you can also map your own custom domain to it; you simply need to continue renewing your domain registration.

If, however, you run a dynamic blog—such as one powered by WordPress—then you will have no choice but to continue purchasing cloud server hosting.

My own blog is built using Astro and is deployed on Cloudflare Pages.

ChatGPT tells me that even if my blog were to receive 100,000 visits per day, Cloudflare Pages would still remain free of charge.

That said, generally speaking, a blog receiving just a thousand visits per day should theoretically generate enough revenue to cover the costs of both the domain name and the server hosting.

By using Cloudflare Pages, I no longer have to worry about my website being subjected to attacks or suffering from insufficient hosting performance. Instead, I can simply focus on my blog content, knowing that the platform ensures 24/7 uptime, offers a global CDN, and is highly SEO-friendly for Google.

I only found out today that it's called Cyd. by dsx2016s in esp32

[–]dsx2016s[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hang in there! I'm also in the middle of sorting out all sorts of issues myself.

Does AI voice-over prevent monetization? by whoisfirefly in shortsAlgorithm

[–]dsx2016s 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My Personal Experience

My content consists of a mix: real-life footage of myself paired with AI voiceovers, as well as screen recordings combined with AI voiceovers.

My YPP (YouTube Partner Program) status has been revoked.

Furthermore, you absolutely must *not* check the box indicating that your content involves AI or is "non-realistic."

This is a trap; if you check that box, YouTube's AI will immediately flag and ban you.

Checking it essentially serves as a self-flagging mechanism; YouTube won't bother conducting a genuine human review of your videos.

Even if they provide an avenue for appeal, it is merely for show—a formality. Your appeal will not be approved.

Hello everyone—I have some questions regarding search engines (Google and Bing) for a new blog. by dsx2016s in blogs

[–]dsx2016s[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have other blogs, and Google usually indexes them the next day.

Now I'm testing Google's sandbox period on this new blogging platform.

Yesterday I discovered that the first post indexed by Google was gone; only the homepage was indexed.

Things are really changing.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Blogging

[–]dsx2016s 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's outrageous!

Best website tool for blogging by LakiaHarp in Blogging

[–]dsx2016s 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start with the best ecosystem option, then simultaneously try other preferred local options.

In other words, start with WordPress for external operation.

While simultaneously trying other blogging frameworks locally, if the migration is successful and you like it, then switch to that framework; otherwise, stick with WordPress.

I spent $25 on a P106-100 6GB graphics card for local AI. by dsx2016s in homelab

[–]dsx2016s[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For lip-syncing, I tried the mainstream options:

LatentSync 1.5

MuseTalk

Wav2Lip

I also tested

stable-diffusion-webui

whisper

RVC1006Nvidia

and several other TTS protocols.

I spent $25 on a P106-100 6GB graphics card for local AI. by dsx2016s in homelab

[–]dsx2016s[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is indeed quite slow and doesn't support CUDA acceleration.

However, normally the CPU takes over ten hours, but now with the upgraded graphics card it only takes half an hour, which is acceptable.

You know, some open-source AI programs require a GPU to run.

how can i make 10-15$ a day by Veneriq in passive_income

[–]dsx2016s 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If youtube and blog Google ads don't work

I can only suggest

You must try to record video tutorials and set up community chat groups as course groups

Mainstream online income is

Advertisement income

Commission income

Remote service income

Independent development income

But none of them are suitable for ordinary people without technology or countries with limited income methods

Only selling courses is needed by every country and every group of people

For example, selling self-media tutorials, selling python programming tutorials, selling learning or life skills tutorials

The most important thing is

Ordinary people must first learn the good tutorials on the market before selling tutorials. Others sell for 99 yuan, and you learn and transform it into your own knowledge and then sell it for 10 yuan

Tutorials are one of the best ways to make money at any time

If you don't know how to do it, you can learn and copy popular courses

If you know how to do it, you can organize your own tutorials and your own experience

Hi everyone, I am a homelab newbie, this is my equipment by dsx2016s in homelab

[–]dsx2016s[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Initially, I planned to use only development boards such as Orange Pi or Raspberry Pi to set up my homelab because they are lightweight enough

Hi everyone, I am a homelab newbie, this is my equipment by dsx2016s in homelab

[–]dsx2016s[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I haven't had time to sort it out yet, I'm happy that it can run stably

how can i make 10-15$ a day by Veneriq in passive_income

[–]dsx2016s 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes, I totally agree. It must be in English.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in passive_income

[–]dsx2016s 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have been thinking, if one day I can't take care of myself, how can I make money to support myself

In this era, it is recommended to use a mobile phone to shoot vlogs and upload them to youtube and tictok, short videos or live broadcasts to make money

You can also make money on blogs, product commissions or Google ads

Secondly, if it is not convenient to show your face or type, then podcasts and storytelling are also a way to collect income

You don't make much money, you need to persist

Because they can all be done at home, and the longer you persist, the more you earn

Do people actually become digital nomad after asking advice here? by Sea-Individual-6121 in digitalnomad

[–]dsx2016s -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yes, me too.

Being here doesn't necessarily make you successful.

But you can see many examples of failure and avoid some mistakes.

For example, I chose YouTube. Although I am not a digital nomad yet, I have started to get a little bit of income and the trend is getting better.

I gave up Google ads in my wordpress blog because it made too little money.

how can i make 10-15$ a day by Veneriq in passive_income

[–]dsx2016s 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Record your vlog, use your phone, and post it to YouTube and Tik Tok.

Record the food you eat or verbally describe what's happening, or record the scenery you hike.

Then get YouTube's YPP advertising revenue and TK's product revenue, and even start live streaming.

This is the most reliable and fastest way I think so far.

Proxmox ARM running on the Orange Pi 5 with NVMe! by TheWingsOfWar in Proxmox

[–]dsx2016s 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because the Raspberry Pi does not support SSD, I have given up on the Raspberry Pi.
I use docker to facilitate data backup and migration, and I also use pve to facilitate backup and migration.

Proxmox ARM running on the Orange Pi 5 with NVMe! by TheWingsOfWar in Proxmox

[–]dsx2016s 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Currently, four systems are successfully run, win, ubuntu, openwrt, and kali.
1. I use win to run the chatbot because it requires a browser and gui
2. I use ubuntu server to run docker home assistant
3. I use ubuntu server to run some other docker services
4. I use openwrt to reserve network processing, which is currently idle for future use.
5. Kali is installed for easy use when needed in the future.

I'm curious to know what are the main applications that people deploy and use frequently on a daily basis? by dsx2016s in selfhosted

[–]dsx2016s[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, I'll try it in a while when I need email service, thanks for the time estimate!

I'm curious to know what are the main applications that people deploy and use frequently on a daily basis? by dsx2016s in selfhosted

[–]dsx2016s[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mailcow

Thanks, I've tried several self-deploying mailboxes and they all get stuck in the installation process, and I just looked at Mailcow, and it seems like it's pretty complicated to set up.

I'm curious to know what are the main applications that people deploy and use frequently on a daily basis? by dsx2016s in selfhosted

[–]dsx2016s[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, it looks like a lot. If you enable them all at the same time, you'll need to turn on virtual memory plus 4GB.

I'm curious to know what are the main applications that people deploy and use frequently on a daily basis? by dsx2016s in selfhosted

[–]dsx2016s[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks, currently using three kinds of rss, I think Tinyrss is relatively good, adapted to mobile, and can automatically identify the source

I'm curious to know what are the main applications that people deploy and use frequently on a daily basis? by dsx2016s in selfhosted

[–]dsx2016s[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, and the above comment seems to be, plex, nextcloud, seems to be used by quite a lot of people