This series is awesome, thank you! There are several series on how to integrate several Raspberry Pi s to work together. They are OK, but much lower quality than what you are doing on this series so if you want ideas for continuing with the series here is one. Thanks again.
Many thanks for this series! I just started following along... Already have some questions/comments: 1. Halfway this video we're editing the PostFix configuration, I would have found it more helpful if you'd quickly went over all settings that you can edit there. Or are we getting back at this at a late point? 2. Ok, we know now how to add multiple accounts for one domain... But what about multiple domains? Oh.. Currently the last video, nr.18, great!
THIS IS AWESOME, NERDY, & FUN! GREAT IDEA to create this course! I have a RPI and will DEFINITELY be watching this course in the near future when I get more time to try it out. I've already hosted a LAMP server at my other house in the past and it ran great. I was actually making money off of the site that I built on my RPI. It was a salespage generating an income for some desktop application that I created. So I made my money back and some by treating this RPI as an investment for building website servers (websites in general) and making money off it without having to pay expensive web hosting companies each month for their SaaS.
Thank you for posting this and the WordPress series. I just have one question. In the WordPress serie you used docker and installed the everything in three containers. Why did you not continue to use Docker in this series?
You do not need a static IP. If the IP changes of course adjustments will need to be made, but your IP won't change unless you reset your router or have a power cut. I also have a video on how to solve the issue of having a dynamic IP by using the Cloud Flare API to update the DNS settings when the IP change is detected. Its under one of my playlists if you have a look.
Hey I have a question about the domain name while setting up Postfix. Does the domain has to be a real one I purchased before? Or is it just an imaginary one?
Great series. This is the reason internet exists.
Brilliant videos - been looking for something like these for years - Many thanks
This series is awesome, thank you! There are several series on how to integrate several Raspberry Pi s to work together. They are OK, but much lower quality than what you are doing on this series so if you want ideas for continuing with the series here is one. Thanks again.
This helped me, thanks!
This is exactly what I've been looking for!
Many thanks for this series! I just started following along... Already have some questions/comments:
1. Halfway this video we're editing the PostFix configuration, I would have found it more helpful if you'd quickly went over all settings that you can edit there. Or are we getting back at this at a late point?
2. Ok, we know now how to add multiple accounts for one domain... But what about multiple domains? Oh.. Currently the last video, nr.18, great!
THIS IS AWESOME, NERDY, & FUN! GREAT IDEA to create this course! I have a RPI and will DEFINITELY be watching this course in the near future when I get more time to try it out. I've already hosted a LAMP server at my other house in the past and it ran great. I was actually making money off of the site that I built on my RPI. It was a salespage generating an income for some desktop application that I created. So I made my money back and some by treating this RPI as an investment for building website servers (websites in general) and making money off it without having to pay expensive web hosting companies each month for their SaaS.
Thank you for posting this and the WordPress series. I just have one question. In the WordPress serie you used docker and installed the everything in three containers. Why did you not continue to use Docker in this series?
Awesome video
i love this
There isn't any written documentation by any chance?
before going further into the course, can anyone confirm if this requires a static IP? My ISP provides dynamic IP only.
You do not need a static IP. If the IP changes of course adjustments will need to be made, but your IP won't change unless you reset your router or have a power cut. I also have a video on how to solve the issue of having a dynamic IP by using the Cloud Flare API to update the DNS settings when the IP change is detected. Its under one of my playlists if you have a look.
@@Singleentity101 Thank you very much for confirming! I'll go through this course and refer to the mentioned video if needed.
Is it best to run webserver and mailserver on same pi or two different pis ?
Doesn't really matter, I personally run them together on the same server. The email server is quite light.
Hey I have a question about the domain name while setting up Postfix. Does the domain has to be a real one I purchased before? Or is it just an imaginary one?