There's also ethical offensive cyber: penetration testing apps/services with permission from the owner to find weaknesses and vulnerabilities so that they can implement fixes, or red-teaming which is basically pretending to be a threat actor and testing an organization's overall security posture.
dap
Not in NL, but these are some helpful career progression flow charts: https://roadmap.sh/devops https://roadmap.sh/cyber-security
This one is a map of cyber security certifications that are out there: https://pauljerimy.com/security-certification-roadmap/
These things look big and intimidating but that's okay, I work in cyber security and there's stuff on these that I don't know. I feel like at least having a starting place and a path to follow can be really helpful especially if you don't know where to start.
Also, Cyber Security is a huge field, do you want to do offensive cyber or defensive cyber? More hands-on-keyboard or more policy based? You mentioned that you wanted that you want to end us as a CISO, some of the best that I know where techs and do-ers first, definitely get some hands on experience before jumping to a policy-level position.
The most important thing about Cyber Security as a career field is to keep learning! Good luck!
I'm not sure if Immich does this but it is a self-hostable Google photos replacement. It does geotagging but I'm not sure if it will break HDR for you. Might be worth while to check out.
That website is ass. Bunch of popups and sketchy redirections