

In my experience, Pulumi can best be described as a waste of time.
In my experience, Pulumi can best be described as a waste of time.
They already answered that.
Switching to Hannah Montana Linux made me hear The Best of Both Worlds again.
I think this is my favorite GOP quote of all time.
Crocoslut really started going downhill after the license change and conversion to nodejs in v9.
I can attest to projectivy and smarttube, they are great. I went with the internet’s recommendation on the $20 Walmart/onn Google tv 4k box, with projectivy as the launcher instead of the default.
My only gripe so far is that the remote doesn’t seem to consistently turn the box on, I have to go unplug the box every so often to reset it. probably some misconfiguration that’s making it not wake from sleep correctly.
Despite that issue, 10/10 experience: ad free YouTube, fast jellyfin in 4k, fully customizable ui…
No. Symlinks and hardlinks are two approaches to creating a “pointer to a file.” They are quite different in implementation, but at the high level:
In both cases, the only additional data used is the metadata used for the link itself. The contents of the file on disk are not copied.
I don’t necessarily agree with it, but there’s the third option of just disabling SELinux and removing the frustration entirely.
No, but you’ll have much more overhead. I have a VM that hosts all Docker deployments which don’t need much disk space (most of them)
This is a big point. One of the key advantages of docker is the layering and the fact that you can build up a pretty sizeable stack of isolated services based on the same set of core OS layers, which means significant disk space savings.
Sure, 200-700MB for a stack of core layers seems small but multiply that by a lot of containers and it adds up.
Can we just let this system die already? ffs
Maybe I’m dense but shouldn’t the clock be:
Yep, I’m a dumb, realized after a cup of coffee. Confirmed by the reply below.
I think I’m just going to go back to bed and skip today
Ultimately it’s a matter of personal choice and risk tolerance.
The Z1 will be simpler and have larger capacity, but if you have a drive fail you’ll need to quickly get it replaced or risk having to rebuild/restore if the mirror drive follows the first one to the grave.
Your Z2 setup right now can have two drives fail and still be online, and having a wider spread of power-on hours is usually a good thing in terms of failure probability.
I manage a large (14,000±) number of on-site RAID1 arrays in various environments and there is definitely a trend for drives shipped at the same time to fail at roughly the same time. It’s common enough that we often intentionally swap drives out before shipping a new unit to the customer site.
On my homelab, I’m much more tolerant of risk since I have trust in my 3-2-1 backup solution and if my NAS goes down it’s not going to substantially affect anything while I wait for a drive replacement.
Ah, a connoisseur.
Point of clarification: DAC is copper, AOC is fiber.
A lot of 10G equipment will support 5G/2.5G SFPs as well, so it can still be beneficial to go 10G on the core equipment.
There’s Finamp, a music client for Jellyfin with offline playback. I’ve not used it personally yet, but with Spotify ratcheting up prices again I’m in the process of switching to self-hosting my music library. When that’s up and running it’s at the top of my list for Android clients.
It’s a diagram of states where certain rights are being suppressed.
Top circle is abortion, bottom left is voting, bottom right is LGBTQ+.
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Ok that’s just not true at all.
Core temps ramp up astonishingly fast on RPi!
ducks
You should know that not all clients display your display name, some only show your username@instance.
It’s not apparent to everyone that your name is Onno.
I bet most Linux people haven’t even Hurd of it.