Desktop, backed up to NAS, nightly pushes to Backblaze b2. Have Immich pointed to the NAS with most of my photos / video as external storage. Any media uploaded to Immich (phone sync) also goes to the NAS and then b2.
Yeah the adrenaline rush is real. I still clearly remember me and a corp mate dropping some BS hitting one of our POSs and we were the only two on. So we got the smart idea to drop them with our dreads (mine I couldn't afford to replace) we killed a few and they brought in reinforcements and we were trapped getting nuted. We kept trying to warp out between siege cycles with no luck after several attempts. Then I got lucky and was able to moonwalk out in structure. My heart was racing and hands were shaking after that.
Fair dice was broken, at least a launch. If you had a really high armor class the NPCs would get an absurd number of nat 20s if that was the only way they could hit you.
I would say that Vaultwarden might not be the best introduction to self hosting given the critical nature and sensitivity of the data. And if you do maybe block the admin page from external sources.
Good to know KeyGuard is an alternative. My main worry was with the extension no longer being compatible as, like you said, I doubt they'll continue to keep the client and API open.
They had cross game interactions with Dust 514 and it didn't amount too much. For most fights the value of the dropped modules is going to be so insignificant as to not really matter as you'd likely get a better return on your time doing sites or mining. Unless they're talking higher rates of T2 salvage but unless they remove that from sites then it'll just crash the market.
My hope is they don't introduce some new components that are needed for current production that are tied to Vanguard loot like they did for planetary interactions.
This is why I stopped using any delivery apps in pretty quick order. They were way too expensive and places that were 10 - 15 minutes away were taking upwards of 30 minutes to get delivered after pickup and arriving cold.
No you port knock first to open the ports. Then connect the client.