

Yeah, you are 100% right. Not only is it not bad in any way, but it is how nearly every single company with internal resources works… It is incredibly common.
Yeah, you are 100% right. Not only is it not bad in any way, but it is how nearly every single company with internal resources works… It is incredibly common.
There is only one Solar system, the star system of Sol. Proxima Centauri is part of a star system
Yeeeah, gonna have to disagree with that. Having dead simple access to your library on any device is amazing. ABS syncs your listening position between devices, has offline downloading, supports rich metadata, collections, customized sleep timers, and quite a bit more.
Bedrock is on all platforms, pc included. Java is PC only.
The sarcasm seems pretty clear to me lol
Not even just pricey, but unpurchasable in many cases. Broadcom is really fucking it up
I have always heard bi-weekly be every other week, and semi-weekly be twice a week
Downloads havent been removed
Well the cheapest there is $2/month, but yeah for a single core I dont think I would be worth the effort to setup, let alone also pay for
Most rented bedrooms in my area dont even have built-in lighting. Its all floor and table lamps, usually on a smart outlet these days
Just fyi, Watts is a measure of power, and WattHours is power over time. So your home network and server consume 130w, which would be 130wh after an hour, or 3120wh after a day. The chest freezer would be 400wh in a day, rather than 400w in a day.
I agree with this. If you are going to be using multiple containers for a single app anyways, what is the point of it being in multiple containers? Stick all of it in one container and save everyone the hassle.
You must have shingled/SMR drives. They do not work well with any type of raid array.
My array of 7x12TB drives resilvers in a few hours, as I made sure I got CMR drives
No, but that is an option if you dont have the hardware to self host it. I have it on one of my vms on my server in the basement.
EDIT: I just took another look at the github repo and it kind of looks like you can’t just selfhost it, but you can, the main readme is just a little confusing. Click on the “Setup your CouchDB” link in the manual section and the selfhosted via docker guide is there.
You should take a look at the selfhosted live sync plugin for obsidian. It’s been working flawlessly for me for the past year.
Proxmox is a hypervisor, which is an OS that is built to run Virtual Machines (proxmox also runs containers). It is open source and can be installed for free, just like any other linux distribution, the same way Windows is installed. There are tons of tutorials out there on how to use it.
From there, you could setup some popular containers, including nextcloud, or even install full OS’s in virtual machines to install software manually on them. It is a great first step, especially if you have limited access to hardware.
The 970 unfortunately doesn’t have h265 hardware in it. The only gpu in that generation that does is the 960, as it was released later than the others and was one of the first to get h265. I ended up just getting a p400, and it’s been rock solid.
Looks interesting! The ui looks miles ahead of NPM, so I might need to check it out
That looks really interesting! I will have to add it to my list to check out
Wow, I tested out jellyfin every 6 months for the last few years to see if it was ready to replace plex yet, and I had no idea about such huge security issues. There should really be a big ass warning about making jellyfin publicly accessible in the app and in setup guides…