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    • Ar chevron_right

      Self-hosting is having a moment. Ethan Sholly knows why.

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 May 2025

    Self-hosting is having a moment, even if it's hard to define exactly what it is.

    It's a niche that goes beyond regular computing devices and networks but falls short of a full-on home lab . (Most home labs involve self-hosting, but not all self-hosting makes for a home lab.) It adds privacy, provides DRM-free alternatives , and reduces advertising. It's often touted as a way to get more out of your network-attached storage (NAS), but it's much more than just backup and media streaming.

    Is self-hosting just running services on your network for which most people rely on cloud companies? Broadly, yes. But take a look at the selfh.st site/podcast/newsletter, the r/selfhosted subreddit , and all the GitHub project pages that link to one another, and you'll also find things that no cloud provider offers.

    Read full article

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    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagdocker tagdocker tagdocker tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagimmich tagimmich tagimmich tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagnas tagnas tagnas tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagplex tagplex tagplex tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagtech tagtech tagtech tagdocker tagdocker tagdocker tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagimmich tagimmich tagimmich tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagnas tagnas tagnas tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagplex tagplex tagplex tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagtech tagtech tagtech tagdocker tagdocker tagdocker tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagimmich tagimmich tagimmich tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagnas tagnas tagnas tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagplex tagplex tagplex tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagself-hosted

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Self-hosting is having a moment. Ethan Sholly knows why.

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 May 2025

    Self-hosting is having a moment, even if it's hard to define exactly what it is.

    It's a niche that goes beyond regular computing devices and networks but falls short of a full-on home lab . (Most home labs involve self-hosting, but not all self-hosting makes for a home lab.) It adds privacy, provides DRM-free alternatives , and reduces advertising. It's often touted as a way to get more out of your network-attached storage (NAS), but it's much more than just backup and media streaming.

    Is self-hosting just running services on your network for which most people rely on cloud companies? Broadly, yes. But take a look at the selfh.st site/podcast/newsletter, the r/selfhosted subreddit , and all the GitHub project pages that link to one another, and you'll also find things that no cloud provider offers.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagdocker tagdocker tagdocker tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagimmich tagimmich tagimmich tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagnas tagnas tagnas tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagplex tagplex tagplex tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagtech tagtech tagtech tagdocker tagdocker tagdocker tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagimmich tagimmich tagimmich tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagnas tagnas tagnas tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagplex tagplex tagplex tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagtech tagtech tagtech tagdocker tagdocker tagdocker tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagimmich tagimmich tagimmich tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagnas tagnas tagnas tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagplex tagplex tagplex tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagself-hosted

    • Pictures 3 image

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Self-hosting is having a moment. Ethan Sholly knows why.

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 May 2025

    Self-hosting is having a moment, even if it's hard to define exactly what it is.

    It's a niche that goes beyond regular computing devices and networks but falls short of a full-on home lab . (Most home labs involve self-hosting, but not all self-hosting makes for a home lab.) It adds privacy, provides DRM-free alternatives , and reduces advertising. It's often touted as a way to get more out of your network-attached storage (NAS), but it's much more than just backup and media streaming.

    Is self-hosting just running services on your network for which most people rely on cloud companies? Broadly, yes. But take a look at the selfh.st site/podcast/newsletter, the r/selfhosted subreddit , and all the GitHub project pages that link to one another, and you'll also find things that no cloud provider offers.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagdocker tagdocker tagdocker tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagimmich tagimmich tagimmich tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagnas tagnas tagnas tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagplex tagplex tagplex tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagtech tagtech tagtech tagdocker tagdocker tagdocker tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagimmich tagimmich tagimmich tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagnas tagnas tagnas tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagplex tagplex tagplex tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagtech tagtech tagtech tagdocker tagdocker tagdocker tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagethan sholly tagimmich tagimmich tagimmich tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagjellyfin tagnas tagnas tagnas tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagnetwork attached storage tagplex tagplex tagplex tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself hosting tagself-hosted tagself-hosted tagself-hosted

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Gemini 2.5 is leaving preview just in time for Google’s new $250 AI subscription

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 May 2025

    MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.—Google rolled out early versions of Gemini 2.5 earlier this year. Marking a significant improvement over the 2.0 branch. For the first time, Google's chatbot felt competitive with the likes of ChatGPT, but it's been "experimental" and later "preview" since then. At I/O 2025, Google announced general availability for Gemini 2.5, and these models will soon be integrated with Chrome. There's also a fancy new subscription plan to get the most from Google's AI. You probably won't like the pricing, though.

    Gemini 2.5 goes gold

    Even though Gemini 2.5 was revealed a few months ago, the older 2.0 Flash has been the default model all this time. Now that 2.5 is finally ready, the 2.5 Flash model will be swapped in as the new default. This model has built-in simulated reasoning, so its outputs are much more reliable than 2.0 Flash.

    Google says the release version of 2.5 Flash is better at reasoning, coding, and multimodality, but it uses 20–30 percent fewer tokens than the preview version. This edition is now live in Vertex AI, AI Studio, and the Gemini app. It will be made the default model in early June.

    Read full article

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    • tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence taggemini taggemini taggemini tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence taggemini taggemini taggemini tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence taggemini taggemini taggemini

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Gemini 2.5 is leaving preview just in time for Google’s new $250 AI subscription

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 May 2025

    MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.—Google rolled out early versions of Gemini 2.5 earlier this year. Marking a significant improvement over the 2.0 branch. For the first time, Google's chatbot felt competitive with the likes of ChatGPT, but it's been "experimental" and later "preview" since then. At I/O 2025, Google announced general availability for Gemini 2.5, and these models will soon be integrated with Chrome. There's also a fancy new subscription plan to get the most from Google's AI. You probably won't like the pricing, though.

    Gemini 2.5 goes gold

    Even though Gemini 2.5 was revealed a few months ago, the older 2.0 Flash has been the default model all this time. Now that 2.5 is finally ready, the 2.5 Flash model will be swapped in as the new default. This model has built-in simulated reasoning, so its outputs are much more reliable than 2.0 Flash.

    Google says the release version of 2.5 Flash is better at reasoning, coding, and multimodality, but it uses 20–30 percent fewer tokens than the preview version. This edition is now live in Vertex AI, AI Studio, and the Gemini app. It will be made the default model in early June.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence taggemini taggemini taggemini tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence taggemini taggemini taggemini tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence taggemini taggemini taggemini

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Gemini 2.5 is leaving preview just in time for Google’s new $250 AI subscription

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 May 2025

    MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.—Google rolled out early versions of Gemini 2.5 earlier this year. Marking a significant improvement over the 2.0 branch. For the first time, Google's chatbot felt competitive with the likes of ChatGPT, but it's been "experimental" and later "preview" since then. At I/O 2025, Google announced general availability for Gemini 2.5, and these models will soon be integrated with Chrome. There's also a fancy new subscription plan to get the most from Google's AI. You probably won't like the pricing, though.

    Gemini 2.5 goes gold

    Even though Gemini 2.5 was revealed a few months ago, the older 2.0 Flash has been the default model all this time. Now that 2.5 is finally ready, the 2.5 Flash model will be swapped in as the new default. This model has built-in simulated reasoning, so its outputs are much more reliable than 2.0 Flash.

    Google says the release version of 2.5 Flash is better at reasoning, coding, and multimodality, but it uses 20–30 percent fewer tokens than the preview version. This edition is now live in Vertex AI, AI Studio, and the Gemini app. It will be made the default model in early June.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence taggemini taggemini taggemini tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence taggemini taggemini taggemini tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence taggemini taggemini taggemini

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trump’s trade war risks splintering the Internet, experts warn

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 May 2025

    In sparking his global trade war, Donald Trump seems to have maintained a glaring blind spot when it comes to protecting one of America's greatest trade advantages: the export of digital services.

    Experts have warned that the consequences for Silicon Valley could be far-reaching.

    In a report released Tuesday, an intelligence firm that tracks global trade risks, Allianz Trade, shared results of a survey of 4,500 firms worldwide, designed "to capture the impact of the escalation of trade tensions." Amid other key findings, the group warned that the US's fixation on the country's trillion-dollar goods deficit risks rocking "the fastest-growing segment of global trade," America's "invisible exports" of financial and digital services.

    Read full article

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    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tageuropean union tageuropean union tageuropean union tagtariffs tagtariffs tagtariffs tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tageuropean union tageuropean union tageuropean union tagtariffs tagtariffs tagtariffs tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tageuropean union tageuropean union tageuropean union tagtariffs tagtariffs tagtariffs

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trump’s trade war risks splintering the Internet, experts warn

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 May 2025

    In sparking his global trade war, Donald Trump seems to have maintained a glaring blind spot when it comes to protecting one of America's greatest trade advantages: the export of digital services.

    Experts have warned that the consequences for Silicon Valley could be far-reaching.

    In a report released Tuesday, an intelligence firm that tracks global trade risks, Allianz Trade, shared results of a survey of 4,500 firms worldwide, designed "to capture the impact of the escalation of trade tensions." Amid other key findings, the group warned that the US's fixation on the country's trillion-dollar goods deficit risks rocking "the fastest-growing segment of global trade," America's "invisible exports" of financial and digital services.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tageuropean union tageuropean union tageuropean union tagtariffs tagtariffs tagtariffs tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tageuropean union tageuropean union tageuropean union tagtariffs tagtariffs tagtariffs tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tageuropean union tageuropean union tageuropean union tagtariffs tagtariffs tagtariffs

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trump’s trade war risks splintering the Internet, experts warn

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 May 2025

    In sparking his global trade war, Donald Trump seems to have maintained a glaring blind spot when it comes to protecting one of America's greatest trade advantages: the export of digital services.

    Experts have warned that the consequences for Silicon Valley could be far-reaching.

    In a report released Tuesday, an intelligence firm that tracks global trade risks, Allianz Trade, shared results of a survey of 4,500 firms worldwide, designed "to capture the impact of the escalation of trade tensions." Amid other key findings, the group warned that the US's fixation on the country's trillion-dollar goods deficit risks rocking "the fastest-growing segment of global trade," America's "invisible exports" of financial and digital services.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tageuropean union tageuropean union tageuropean union tagtariffs tagtariffs tagtariffs tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tageuropean union tageuropean union tageuropean union tagtariffs tagtariffs tagtariffs tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdigital services tax tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tageuropean union tageuropean union tageuropean union tagtariffs tagtariffs tagtariffs

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