

Good point, thank you!


Good point, thank you!


That would be the perfect scenario. But I think something imperfect is better than resigning ourselves to US/China quantum.


For those unfamiliar with DDNS, this allows you to remotely access your computer connected to your local network. Basically, you configure your computer to periodically send its public IP address (which usually changes) to the DDNS.
This way, externally you always point to a subdomain (example.ldns.pl) and it redirects to your current public IP address. This allows you, for example, to connect remotely via SSH to your computer on the local network, or to services you deployed there.


You can choose your own subdomain for free (example.ldns.pl). And you can even set a free SSL certificate, very useful if you want to expose a local service securely.


But this is a different service, right? I mean, not related to Dynamic DNS. Anyway, I didn’t know this European DNS alternative and I will definitely try it.


Thanks for sharing!


Personally, I recently migrated from DuckDNS.org to LDNS.pl, and it works fantastically.


Explain your statement.
I see your point. But this service doesn’t need a lot of computing resources so I guess it can be financed through donations or just altruism.