

You’re welcome !
Apparently, it’s 12 years old, though I haven’t heard of it until 3 years ago when I started using it.
🇬🇧 | 24yo French web dev & tech enthusiast
🇫🇷 | Développeur web Limougeaud de 24 ans passionné par l’informatique
Main fediverse account (Mastodon) : mamot.fr/@KaKi87
Blog (Lemmy) : blog.kaki87.net
Formerly @KaKi87@sh.itjust.works, moved because of Cloudflare.


You’re welcome !
Apparently, it’s 12 years old, though I haven’t heard of it until 3 years ago when I started using it.


I would have liked to include this, but no, I never took note of this. Maybe I will in 2026.
If you’d like a few more details though, I answered a previous comment about this.


When they asked about how much to pay, my exact words are : I ask you pay me based on what you can afford and how satisfied you are.
But yeah, sometimes, they say : “come on, you gotta give me an amount, pal”. In which case, I’ll just say people usually pay me between 20 and 40 bucks.


Thank you !
How do people find you?
On an app called “AlloVoisins” (I’m French btw), which in English would sound close to Nextdoor I suppose (literal translation would be “HelloNeighbor”), but it’s not the same kind of app. People can post about their need of a good or service (and only that, it’s not social media), then people who can provide will answer (and it only works one-way like this), so it’s closer to Craigslist but not exactly (we do have a 1:1 equivalent of Craigslist, it works well for goods but not for services).
One funny thing is a lot of people say they will recommend me to people, yet in the 3 years that I’ve been doing this, it only happened once that I was actually contacted directly after being recommended by someone esle.
One even funnier thing : only a few weeks apart, I received requests from two people literally living next to each other, neighbors, who talk to each other daily where their respective yards connect, yet they both went through the app.
Is the number of people asking for linux increasing?
Actually nobody asks for Linux, most of the people I install Linux for don’t even know what Windows is, despite having been using it for years. I offer to install it, when I know that the person could use it and not loose one bit of their routine while enjoying their computer almost as if it was new just because the system will be lighter (and not harrassing them about updates).


Thank you for your appreciation !


I would have liked to include this, but it wouldn’t really be data nor beautiful cause I don’t have accurate statistics, not even with approximate ranges.
However, I can tell you that most of the people I help are at least middle-aged and often seniors.
One notable exception is the one data recovery entry : they were a university student using a very cheap and/or old HDD (IDE, not even SATA) until they suddenly couldn’t access anything, I was able to save everything they needed into a new one.
Another one is a few weeks ago (so not on this chart because 2026), I received a request from a mom who had bought their young son their first computer, a noname desktop from Amazon, that was poorly assembled : their issue was the monitor would turn off between 30-90 mins after starting a game, they thought it was a GPU overloading/overheating issue, but no, it was a false contact due to the GPU’s power plug being stuck in a twisting position against the case door.


Nope, as mentioned, I do it on my free time, aside from my real job. The goal isn’t to make money, but to lend a hand to people in need. That’s why it’s pay-what-you-want. This also gives me a rare perspective : I get to know truly how much people value my services.


Did they homemake everything ?
No NextCloud, no OnlyOffice ?


Do you really access your data most often from home than remotely ?


Except one benefit of the datacenter is redundancy : it going offline is way less likely than your home Internet (or anything else it depends on) going down.


If the internet or anything else goes down you lose all access.
That’s also the case when your home connection or electricity goes down and you’re not on site.
If that’s not a concern, then you don’t need to self-host, you just need a desktop app.


Alright, I guess I should have rather made a post like PSA: beware of Netcup, they shut you down on suspicion of doing stuff against their ToS whether it’s actually the case or not and without giving you a warning to respond.


At the very least, you could cut off Internet access and reduce vCores to 0.5, instead of completely shutting it down and only offering the user to book 4 hours of access during business hours as if they didn’t have work too.


Yet they’re already in your home.


No I mean the post was removed.
Coucou !
That’s right.
What do you mean ?
I don’t know how it is in Brive so I can’t compare, but we do have a pretty good bus network : inside the city, all stops are served every 10-15 minutes, and in the suburbs, stops are served once or twice an hour.
Sometimes I do have to plan for longer-than-usual layovers or walking, e.g. 20 minutes, and sometimes the the bus just doesn’t go far enough and I have to ask them to pick me up at the nearest stop which is usually a 5 min drive away.