

- Odin Sphere
- not a lot more
It is possible to commit no mistakes and still lose. That is not weakness; that is life.
Jean-Luc Picard
Mastodon: @fixmycode@lile.cl
that’s cool and all but when are we getting Jellyfin for Tizen on the Samsung TV app store? That’s the only thing stopping me from switching, I don’t want to deploy it myself
and the partner still prefers Netflix, because they hate to think what they want to watch
I believe that the OS puts the CPU in a different state, that’s all. while the BIOS and the UEFI shell had it boosting all the time or something like that
I bought a N5100 from AliExpress and I use it to run my -arr apps and Plex, and so far it has behaved really good. It’s fanless in an all-metal case and it gets a bit hot, but nothing you wouldn’t put your hand over. Weirdly, before I installed Debian in it, the BIOS and UEFI console made the CPU so hot I was worried it would not work without a fan, but after the OS took over, it’s working without any issue. I installed 16gb of ram in it and two SSDs, and the power consumption is so low I’m really amazed.
Edit: I might add, I bought it barebones, so I missed the W11 license, but I was never planning to use it anyway.
I don’t have anything bad to say of Plex as a company, and I wish them luck on their endeavor, but if they ever fall, I just hope they open source their software…
I have the feeling that this is very dependant of the motherboard having virtualization support for the PCIE slot, but I can’t recall the name of the feature
Thanks! now I’m looking at fanless N100 and N200 options from AliExpress. I really can’t handle fan noise…
These seem to be intended for pfsense and routers, any experience running HA on them?
I feel you can’t access because your router doesn’t loop back connections to your own IP. To fix that you might need to run a local dns that routes traffic to that domain to your local machine, you can do that running a service like dnsmasq and pointing your router to that service instead of the default dns (and always set a secondary DNS in case your service fails)
my theory is that (most) people want their money’s worth. if you have two phones, one bigger than the other, but you don’t know the prices of each, the perceived value of the bigger one is higher, even in they’re both the same price you wouldn’t assume right away that the bigger one had to cut things out to offset the bigger display.
phones are also a big gift item, and people are not concerned with niche likes in those cases.
I’d say that the increased popularity of foldable phones currently speak of our desire of smaller phones (my partner at least says it’s the reason she loves hers) with a higher perceived value. I hope marketing departments are taking the right notes from these and not that foldable is better.