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towerful@programming.devto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Getting worn out with all these docker images and CLI hosted appsEnglish
51·1 month agoI love cli and config files, so I can write some scripts to automate it all.
It documents itself.
Whenever I have to do GUI stuff I always forget a step or do things out of order or something.
towerful@programming.devto
Technology@beehaw.org•Spotify’s 3rd price hike in 2.5 years hints at potential new normal
2·2 months agoNo idea. Haven’t started digging into it yet
towerful@programming.devto
Technology@beehaw.org•Spotify’s 3rd price hike in 2.5 years hints at potential new normal
9·2 months agoTIDALs continued awesomeness suggests suitable alternatives.
Spotify pays Joe Rogan how much? And pays artists how little?
TIDAL does music.
I changed a few years ago, and all I miss are the integrations.
I’m lucky that I have decent speakers & dac on my desktop, and decent IEMs. So I can listen to music where I want.
But I can’t buy a “tidal speaker” in the way I could buy a “Spotify speaker”.
But I’m arrogantly confident enough to waste some money solving this with home assistant, some rpi/nucs, and some speakers. I feel I don’t need (I actually don’t want a vendor locked in) “just works” solution, and I’m happy rolling my own.
towerful@programming.devto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•The right FUCKING time to get TWO ram sticks damagedEnglish
3·2 months agoYeh, the 16/32 in the screenshot and that 2 sticks are dead suggests they have 4x 8gb sticks, and lends credence that one channel is being messed with.
They said they tested the ram on multiple systems, but they might have just thrown both “dead” sticks in there at the same time - leading to a similar failure mode as they are both on the same channel.I bet 1 stick is dead, and they could probably get away with 24gb of ram in a 3/2 channel distribution
towerful@programming.devto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•The right FUCKING time to get TWO ram sticks damagedEnglish
3·2 months agoMaybe 1 is causing the other to fail?
Could try the sticks individually.It is strange that 2 sticks fail at the same time. It smells like a symptom instead of the root issue.
towerful@programming.devto
Technology@beehaw.org•ChatGPT could prioritize sponsored content as part of ad strategy — sponsored content could allegedly be given preferential treatment in LLM’s responses, OpenAI to use chat data to deliver highly pers
13·2 months agoOmg, even the thing that is enshittifying everything is now being enshittified itself.
Pretty much any mikrotik is a fantastic piece of kit to have.
It is so unbelievably versatile.
I love the various mikrotik routers, switches and APs I have. I use them all the time for little ad-hoc networks and projects and stuff.
You will learn a lot about networking when using them.But Unifi is a hell of a lot easier to use, and I have not found anything I can’t do on unifi (but I don’t do bgp, mlag, etc at home).
towerful@programming.devto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Would a cheap, used raspberry pi 3 make for a good test server for following random self hosted tutorials? [SOLVED]English
3·3 months agoOh, and on the “fail often” thing…
Get a basic/old/free pc/laptop and install Proxmox on it.
Loads of tutorials out there, but the basic installer will get you to a “I’m learning” stage.Create a VM, install Debian, play around.
Then: create a new VM, install Debian, create a snapshot, play around until it does what you want, restore the snapshot, do the steps that got you from vanilla to what you want. Create snapshots along the way as checkpoints. Snapshot, tinker, restore snapshot, advance.Proxmox is amazing for learning VMs and server things
towerful@programming.devto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Would a cheap, used raspberry pi 3 make for a good test server for following random self hosted tutorials? [SOLVED]English
2·3 months agoRaspberry pis are an easy intro to actually using computers (instead of using something like windows).
Raspbian is great (based on Debian) and there is a HUGE community for it.So yeh, it’s a great started for $25, as long as you have a PSU and SD Card. And an hdmi cable + monitor + keyboard at your disposal (and a mouse if you are installing a desktop environment (IE something like windows, whereas headless is a full screen CLI).
And don’t get your hopes up for a windows replacement.But… Why not run a Virtual Machine? If you have a windows machine, run VirtualBox, create a VM and install Debian on it?
That’s free. You can tinker and play.
And the only thing you are missing from an actual raspberry pi is that it isn’t a standalone device (IE your desktop has to be on for it to be running), and it doesn’t have GPIO (ie hardware pins. And if this is your goal, there are other ways).If you really really want a computer that is on all the time running Linux (Debian, a derivative (like raspbian) or some other distro) - aka a server - then there are plenty of other options where the only drawback is lack of GPIO (which, in my experience, is rarely a drawback).
And that is literally any computer you can get your hands on. Because the raspberry pi trades A LOT for its form factor, the ethernet speed is limited, the bus speed is limited (impacting USB and ethernet (and ram?)), the SD card is slower and will fail faster than any HDD/SSD. The benefit is the GPIO, the very low power draw, and the form factor - rarely actually a benefit.I’d say, play around with some virtual box VMs. See what you want, other than Fear Of Missing Out (things like PiHole? They run on Debian, or even in a docker container). Then see if you actually want a home server, and what you want to run on it.
It’s likely you won’t want a raspberry pi, but a $150 mini pc that can actually do what you want.
The majority of Europe survives.
Although their sockets are recessed.
towerful@programming.devto
Android@lemdro.id•I'll quit watching YouTube before I give it my IDEnglish
2·4 months agoAre they actually free?
Are we maybe misunderstanding YouTube… A company?
I doubt it.
Tripping over a cable is as likely to damage the socket as it is to rip the cable out of the plug.
Any appliance that increases risk by being unplugged should probably not be using a consumer connection…I think the 3 pin layout caused a lot of headaches, and the integrated fuse required a user-servicable plug.
So it would have to be a split-shell design of some type, where the appliance cable would have to be cable-gripped to the same part as the plug/socket pins.
Thus, a bottom-entry (heh) cable grip and a removable back plate that can only be unscrewed when it’s unplugged.
This was all in a time of bakelite. Plastic wasn’t flexible.But no, I think tripping over an early bakelite g-type (I think it’s officially a g-type) plug cable would likely shatter the plug and pull the pins out of the socket… If it didn’t also damage the socket.
No, the cable comes out perpendicular to the pins (ie parallel to the wall).
Which pretty much guarantees foot-pain orientation
towerful@programming.devto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•My "privacy" browser now adds an extra unique tracking URL to every link that I share, to advertise itself and track the opening rateEnglish
1·4 months agoAh, I missed that part of the conversation
towerful@programming.devto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•My "privacy" browser now adds an extra unique tracking URL to every link that I share, to advertise itself and track the opening rateEnglish
5·4 months agoYou sure it’s not WhatsApp that’s link-shortening?
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Mumble was awesome. It probably still is, to be fair