Report post You have 30 minutes to complete this form before the CAPTCHA will expire. Security image * Required field JavaScript is required to view this page. Either you do not have JavaScript enabled in your web browser, you do not have cookies enabled in your web browser, or this website is misconfigured such that cookies do not save correctly. This is a reported post for a post in the topic <input class="cms_keep_ui_controlled" size="45" title="[post param="NextCloud"]293[/post]" type="button" value="post Comcode tag (dbl-click to edit/delete)" />, by jacobgkau<br /><br /><comcode-quote param="2">Just wanted to add one more thing, it looks like you will <i>need</i> to acquire a domain name to use one way or another, because Let's Encrypt does its verification based on your domain name (basically, "can you prove that you control this domain name? If so, we will issue you a certificate for it.")<br /><br />You could do that by purchasing one from a registrar like Hover (you can save $2 if you use <a class="user_link" href="https://hover.nots.co" rel="nofollow noopener external" target="_blank" title="hover.nots.co (this link will open in a new window)">hover.nots.co</a>), or another registrar like GoDaddy (which will try to upsell you on anything and everything) or Network Solutions or anything else. If you don't want to shell out the ~$13/year, you could try doing it with a free dynamic DNS resolver like <a class="user_link" href="https://www.noip.com/" rel="nofollow noopener external" target="_blank" title="noip.com (this link will open in a new window)">noip.com</a>, or using a free domain registrar like <a class="user_link" href="http://dot.tk" rel="nofollow noopener external" target="_blank" title="dot.tk (this link will open in a new window)">dot.tk</a> (I used .tk for Nerd on the Street in the very beginning, but that was before Let's Encrypt existed, so I don't know how they will work together.)<br /><br />My personal recommendation is to just get a domain name, because it will make things easier for you unless your ISP changes your public IP address ridiculously often, in which case something like NoIP may be necessary.<br /></comcode-quote><br />//// PUT YOUR REPORT BELOW \\\\<br /><br /> Add: Add: Font Size Color [Font] Arial Courier Georgia Impact Times Trebuchet Verdana Tahoma Geneva Helvetica [Size] 0.8 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 4 [Color] Black Blue Gray Green Orange Purple Red White Yellow This is a reported post for a post in the topic [post param="NextCloud"]293[/post], by jacobgkau [quote="2"] Just wanted to add one more thing, it looks like you will [i]need[/i] to acquire a domain name to use one way or another, because Let's Encrypt does its verification based on your domain name (basically, "can you prove that you control this domain name? If so, we will issue you a certificate for it.") You could do that by purchasing one from a registrar like Hover (you can save $2 if you use [url="https://hover.nots.co"]hover.nots.co[/url]), or another registrar like GoDaddy (which will try to upsell you on anything and everything) or Network Solutions or anything else. If you don't want to shell out the ~$13/year, you could try doing it with a free dynamic DNS resolver like [url="https://www.noip.com/"]noip.com[/url], or using a free domain registrar like [url="http://dot.tk"]dot.tk[/url] (I used .tk for Nerd on the Street in the very beginning, but that was before Let's Encrypt existed, so I don't know how they will work together.) My personal recommendation is to just get a domain name, because it will make things easier for you unless your ISP changes your public IP address ridiculously often, in which case something like NoIP may be necessary. [/quote] //// PUT YOUR REPORT BELOW \\\\ Use of this website implies that you agree to the website rules and privacy policy.