Andres4NY

joined 2 years ago
[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

@tuxec @zygo_histo_morpheus Is "soyware" related to the pejorative "soyboy"?

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 1 points 5 months ago (2 children)

@Shimitar @whysofurious Same. Getting an enclosure that can properly use linux's uas driver rather than the usb-storage driver is a night-and-day difference. Read the reviews and get a dedicated single-drive enclosure for like $30, and don't overlook cooling. Sometimes an external usb fan is a better option than an enclosure with built-in fans but poor airflow.

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 1 points 5 months ago

@Sunny Backups are done weekly, using Restic (and with '--read-data-subset=9%' to verify that the backup data is still valid).

But that's also in addition to doing nightly Snapraid syncs for larger media, and Syncthing for photos & documents (which means I have copies on 2+ machines).

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 2 points 5 months ago

@werefreeatlast I do this with yggdrasil. Every yggdrasil host gets its own unique private IPv6 address (routeable only to other yggdrasil hosts). As long as you have a single yggdrasil host that's located in public (I use a VPS for this), you can reach any of the yggdrasil hosts from any of the other ones via their IPv6 address. I then map those addresses with DNS, so I don't have to ever type them.

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 4 points 5 months ago

@ohshit604 @AbidanYre Nah, they are still doing releases, but they're hidden. You have to combine the past few releases to unlock the url for the latest release.

[I'm joking, of course.]

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

@sxan @elyviere In particular, there are two gl.inet models that you can install openwrt on: https://forum.openwrt.org/t/best-newcomer-routers-2024/189050/2

The other models run modified openwrt but don't necessarily allow you to install a stock openwrt release.

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 1 points 6 months ago

@Decipher0771 @victory Neat, I didn't know keepalived was still active and popular. https://bugs.debian.org/144100

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 7 points 6 months ago (1 children)

@cm0002 @aberrate_junior_beatnik That looks like a 15A receptacle (https://www.icrfq.net/15-amp-vs-20-amp-outlet/). If it was installed on a 20A circuit (with a 20A breaker and wiring sized for 20A), then the receptacle was the weak point. Electricians often do this with multiple 15A receptacles wired together for Reasons (https://diy.stackexchange.com/questions/12763/why-is-it-safe-to-use-15-a-receptacles-on-a-20-a-circuit) that I disagree with for exactly what your picture shows. That said, overloading it is not SUPER likely to cause a fire - just destroy the outlet and appliance plugs.

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 1 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

@Disaster @Sunny I found tmobile's 5g to be reasonably priced ($50/mo) and solid speeds. Much better than spectrum, but it depends on how close to a tower you are.

Sadly, https://www.nycmesh.net/ isn't out in central queens yet.

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 3 points 7 months ago

@chronicledmonocle @sugar_in_your_tea This is why I love yggdrasil. Thanks to having a VPS running it that all of my hosts globally can connect to, I can just use IPv6 for everything and reverse proxy using those IPv6 addresses where I need to. Once hosts are connected and on my private yggdrasil network, I stop caring about CGNAT or IPv4 at all other than to maybe create public IPv4 access to a service.

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