Skip to main content


Hosting providers


Right now superstimul.us is hosted on a Vultr VPS instance. I use Vultr because it's a decently reliable VPS host that offers OpenBSD (though this instance is running in Docker on a Debian system). Much cheaper than AWS; comparable pricing and features with many other VPS providers.

But I just went looking at the prices of competitors, and Hetzner is cheap. How is it so cheap? For roughly the same price I'm paying for this host, I could get ~8x the vCPUs and RAM, and 4x the storage.

It would be a hassle to migrate at this point, but I'm definitely tempted.

This entry was edited (9 months ago)
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Everything I've heard about Hetzner has been great. It seems like their strategy is to build their own servers and seriously compete on price. My guess is that they'll eventually raise prices, but probably still be cheaper than average.
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Some things to be aware of regarding Hetzner:
1. It's *even more* cost-competitive if you participate in their dutch-style server-capacity auction (a neat idea):
- hetzner.com/sb/
- docs.hetzner.com/robot/general…
- There is also open-source tooling to automate interaction with the auction.
2. Have no illusions that such infrastructure is physically secure against interference (fun example at: notes.valdikss.org.ru/jabber.r…), and account for such in your threat model if/as appropriate.


Notes on the outcome of groups experiment


I think groups are a pretty half-baked feature, and I don't expect people to use them much. A "group" (previously called a "forum", and most of the documentation hasn't been updated to reflect this change) is basically an account that auto-reshares things it's tagged in. You can give it a few different settings for how it responds to follow requests, and another setting for the visibility of its reshares. To administer a group, you have to create a second account for it (which friendica does make relatively easy but not trivial), and then switch to being logged-in "as" the group.

So, yeah I guess it might be useful for coordinating things somehow, and the setting with private reshares is maybe promising (though also marked "experimental"). But it seems much less natural to me than the corresponding concept on Facebook.

This entry was edited (9 months ago)
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Ah, alas! I think one of the key features of a [facebook] group is that it's styled differently, so you always know when you're reading or posting something "inside" a group. That can give you an instantaneous confidence that you're not messing it up by posting it publicly. If friendica groups are just regular posts with a tag + settings, then I think they wouldn't give people that feeling of confidence.

Test Group reshared this.


!Test Group

Huh, so this is a test group. What does the result of this look like? Who can see it?

in reply to Sam FM Test Group reshared this.

Further question, can anyone on friendica see the contents of this test group?
in reply to Alex Altair Test Group reshared this.

My guess is yes, because I can see it even in an incognito window.


This entry was edited (9 months ago)
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

@Jen Blight I probably wouldn't have shared this except that it reminded me again of your tile photos


Some praise for the behind-the-scenes tech I'm using to run this site


  • Tailscale: Lightweight personal VPNs. Tailscale is so good. I don't even need to have an open ssh port on the VPS running this instance, because I can connect over tailscale SSH with zero hassle.
  • Caddy: Caddy is like nginx if nginx cared about usability. e.g. it makes it trivial to put an HTTP service behind a TLS proxy. Like, it even manages the LetsEncrypt certificate for you. Totally wild.
  • Docker, and the official Friendica images especially: I hate developing for containers, and avoid it when possible. But when someone else has put in the effort to make a high-quality container image, deployment is genuinely much easier, even for hosting the thing on a VPS.
This entry was edited (9 months ago)


The plan for the beta


Thanks to everyone who's joined to help beta test! I'm very grateful y'all are here! ❤️

My basic plan is to use superstimul.us for the next week, posting here instead of Facebook, getting a sense of the platform so that I can help other people later, and trying to iron out basic issues if they crop up.

After that, I'm going to do a push to invite clusters of people who I'm especially excited about being here. I'll probably reach out to y'all for names of people who are cruxy for your active enjoyment/participation here (feel free to preemptively message me about this!).

Anybody can invite their friends, btw, though I would slightly prefer you held off for now, because I want to be strategic about the launch.

I might do some kind of incentive / costly-signaling scheme where I give $20 or so to the first 30 people who share a substantive post here, and not on other social media? Or something; Not sure about that yet.

This entry was edited (9 months ago)


I'm considering going to the southern hemisphere for December and January, to miss the shortest days in California.

New Zealand and Chile both seem like good options: Tons of sun that time of year, good climate, safe cities, relatively cheap. Chile is a lot cheaper, and after having a lot of fun visiting Mexico, I kind of want to try living in a country where I don't know the language.

This entry was edited (9 months ago)
in reply to kip

I have in the past, yeah. This past winter I didn't so much, maybe because I was holed up at my childhood house for a lot of it, which was really pleasant / cozy. But I generally dislike super short days even disregarding any depression stuff.
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

You are welcome to hole up again in your childhood home this winter!

kip reshared this.


I'm really excited for this experiment! Friendica exceeds my expectations in some ways (looks nice, has imo an especially good privacy model, seems easy to update and administer) and falls short in others (ease of finding people, occasional UI weirdness).

Please let me know if you run into any issues and I'll try to fix them or at least help resolve them

This entry was edited (9 months ago)
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Sure! Yeah overall I'm very enthusiastic about this project. Admittedly there are a concerning number bugs and questionable design choices with Frendica, but I'm not familiar with alternatives. (Also, I don't have a good sense of what is fixable/configurable.)
in reply to Sam FM

Cool, thanks! I looked into several alternatives before choosing Friendica. The thing that comes closest is diaspora*, but I tried it and liked it less, and anyway it seemed a lot harder to host.


Testing


subtitle


Is there anybody out there

This entry was edited (9 months ago)