For real? Damn it that’s going to be painful.
Kata1yst
- 0 posts
- 40 comments
- 2 years
Never ask a man his pay, a woman her weight, or a data horder the contents of their stash.
Jk. Mostly.
I have a similar-ish set up to @Davel23 , I have a couple of cool use cases.
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I seed the last 5 arch and opensuse (a few different flavors) ISOs at all times
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I run an ArchiveBot for archive.org
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I scan nontrivial mail (the paper kind) and store it in docspell for later OCR searches, tax purposes etc.
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I help keep Sci-Hub healthy
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I host several services for de-googling, including Nextcloud, Blocky, Immich, and Searxng
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I run Navidrome, that has mostly (and hopefully will soon completely) replace Spotify for my family.
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I run Plex (hoping to move to Jellyfin sometime, but there’s inertial resistance to that) that has completely replaced Disney streaming, Netflix streaming, etc for me and my extended family.
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I host backups for my family and close friends with an S3 and WebDAV backup target
I run 4x14TB, 2x8TB, 2x4TB, all from serverpartsdeals, in a ZFS RAID10 with two 1TB cache dives, so half of the spinning rust usable at ~35TB, and right now I’m at 62% utilization. I usually expand at about 85%
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My favorite city builder in decades. A few notes.
Pros:
- Easy mode is relaxing and quite easy.
- Medium mode is a fun challenge at first, eventually becoming fairly chill as you advance in skill and confidence.
- Hard mode is always fairly hard, especially on harder maps.
- There are many resources to manage, but none that feel burdensome.
- The game is extremely thematic, it feels alive with charm.
- Graphics are excellent, though sometimes graphical glitches can still be encountered.
- The water. It’s so hard to explain to someone who hasn’t encountered this system before, but water is life in this game, and it’s both beautiful graphically, and extremely well simulated by physics. Learning to control the water, and see the shortest paths to end water scarcity with beaver engineering is an amazingly fun and unique aspect of the game.
- Mods are well supported and the community is vibrant.
Cons:
- Not a ton of content. They’ve been very good about adding new mechanics (badwater, extract, etc) but there’s still just 2 races of beaver and a dozen or so maps.
- No directed experience. In similar games I’ve enjoyed a campaign, challenge maps/scenarios, weekly challenges, a deeper progression system, just… Something to optionally set your goals. There’s nothing of the sort in the vanilla game. It’s fully open ended and there’s only one unlock outside of your progress though the resource tree in a map.
All in all, I highly recommend it, especially at the modest asking price. If you love city builders, charming and beautiful art, thematic settings, dynamic challenge, and solution engineering, this is a fantastic game for you.
Other games I’ve enjoyed that scratch similar itches:
- KSP
- Cities: Skylines (but Timberborn has been far more compelling)
- Factorio
- Mindustry
- Planet Zoo (Timberborn has less of a directed experience, but is otherwise completely superior)
- Gnomoria
- Banished
- Tropico series (though I view this as more casual)
Get it and have fun is my recommendation.
Yeah honestly no idea regarding moderation. But the codebase is maintained by a team.
There is a team, not a sole dev.
I’m not saying everything is roses and rainbows, but this is FUD messaging being spread openly by the mbin dev team.
You say “no one knows coffee better than he does”, while blatantly disagreeing with his entirely empirical points in his video on decaf, that it can be made by several processes, all of them are fairly good, and the result can be masterful?
I live in a hockey capitol. That makes me nothing like an expert. Same for you.
Okay, so you make brilliant decaf. That means your point in this thread is moot?
Funny thing on that “subjectivity” is when you disagree with other people in this thread, you’ve plainly said they’re just entirely wrong.
When someone disagrees with you, you hide behind “subjectivity”.
I encourage you to introspect.
You sincerely think you have a better grasp on coffee than James Hoffmann?
Much more likely you haven’t tried good decaf from a good roaster, tried a blind tasting, or your preparation is seriously flawed.
Yeah, well for many of us it’s decaf or no coffee due to health issues. You acting like it’s a foolish, childish thing is just tribalism/elitism.
And for what it’s worth, I’d put my decaf vs your coffee in a heartbeat. A good roaster with quality beans is great coffee, decaf or no. Just like Hoffman said.
I’ve had great experiences with exactly one vendor of second hand disks.
Currently running 8x14TB in a striped & mirrored zpool.
- Kata1yst@kbin.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What are the most paranoid network/OS security measures you've implemented in your homelab?
2 yearsReally all I do is setup fail2ban on my very few external services, and then put all other access behind wireguard.
Logs are clean, I’m happy.
Yeah, you should be scrubbing weekly or monthly, depending on how often you are using the data. Scrub basically touches each file and checks the checksums and fixes any errors it finds proactively. Basically preventative maintenance.
https://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/jammy/man8/zpool-scrub.8.htmlSet that up in a cron job and check zpool status periodically.
No dedup is good. LZ4 compression is good. RAM to disk ratio is generous.
Check your disk’s sector size and vdev ashift. On modern multi-TB HDDs you generally have a block size of 4k and want ashift=12. This being set improperly can lead to massive write amplification which will hurt throughput.
https://www.high-availability.com/docs/ZFS-Tuning-Guide/How about snapshots? Do you have a bunch of old ones? I highly recommend setting up a snapshot manager to prune snapshots to just a working set (monthly keep 1-2, weekly keep 4, daily keep 6 etc) https://github.com/jimsalterjrs/sanoid
And to parrot another insightful comment, I also recommend checking the disk health with SMART tests. In ZFS as a drive begins to fail the pool will get much slower as it constantly repairs the errors.
ZFS is a very robust choice for a NAS. Many people, myself included, as well as hundreds of businesses across the globe, have used ZFS at scale for over a decade.
Attack the problem. Check your system logs, htop, zpool status.
When was the last time you ran a zpool scrub? Is there a scrub, or other zfs operation in progress? How many snapshots do you have? How much RAM vs disk space? Are you using ZFS deduplication? Compression?
- Kata1yst@kbin.socialtoProgramming@programming.dev•I spent all day comparing Bard vs ChatGPT 4. Here are the results (Software Developer Questions)2 years
What a weirdly unjustified, baseless attack on someone contributing a useful conversation. And when presented with evidence that you’re not just being a huge jerk, that you’re entirely wrong, you get defensive and continue to denegrate OP?
Shame on you. If you have had half the illustrious career you claim to have, you should have worked in enough places and with enough people to know when to eat crow.
Infighting and personal attacks like this from positions of false authority like yours are exactly why people have such low opinions of programmers as members of society.
Rofl. I just imagine OP furiously updating LinkedIn with “AI Programmer”.
A notebook and crayons? I think you’d just get back stick figure-esque drawings of cybertrucks with notes like “bulletproof” and “anti-gas attack”.
Just like the poor Tesla design team.
- 2 years
Super interesting, thank you for sharing. I’ve read a significant portion and will saving this for future reference.
It pairs nicely with this series on a foundational technical documentation framework: https://documentation.divio.com/
It can. Most people just use the filesystem watcher, but this looks nice. https://github.com/deathbybandaid/tdarr_inform
Highly recommend using tdarr. Not just because the radarr container won’t do it, but because tdarr is so incredibly powerful.
I’ve had excellent luck with Docspell. https://github.com/eikek/docspell


I use FreshRSS. Can’t say I love the interface, but with the open and standardized API, there are dozens of beautiful front ends to choose on any device.