Fedegenerate

joined 2 years ago
[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Aoostar n100 2 Bay nas is what I'm currently thinking about. Or the same device but rebadged.

Pros: n100 for quicksync. 2 bays of HDD for media storage. Low power at idle. Cheap for a box with all relevant codecs + sata storage. High WAF compared to other HTPCs

Cons: Unknown brand for build quality and bios updates. General Chinese security anxieties. Idle power, while low, is higher than other n100 options. Fan isn't pwm. Personally don't like the aesthetics.

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Favourite game - 1, it was the first one I played and the one I'm most familiar with.

Least is 3, it was the first game I encountered with day 1 dlc, so didn't get any. Last ME game I bought too, Jokes on me I guess because I got the remaster instead.

I enjoyed KOTOR/II before it and I was hoping for more of the same, more HK-47 really. No HK but the play is familiar: go to a planet do some quests, X person wants to talk and on to the next.

Femshep is the only shep for me.

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 5 points 1 year ago

Allowing a Pokémon to evolve earlier results in a stronger 'mon at the end.

I thought that was to balance the faster level gain and learning of moves, but no. The only consideration to letting a Pokémon evolve is "will it learn the move I want". I was corrected yesterday.

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The second shift.

We're certainly not perfect, at it as my fiancée is more a planner and I'm more knock down obstacles as I get to 'em. Which shakes out as if we want things done well they're assigned to my fiancée, and if we want things done at all they're assigned to me. So even though we try, my better half is house manager and I'm house minion.

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Personally running an Argon Neo on the pi 4, zero complaints. Flirc is better looking by half (imho), but the Neo out performs it thermally (with the cover off, at least the articles I read claimed as much when I was looking).

I'm running it as a pihole/jellyfin&servarr passively cooled with zero problems.

Edit, one complaint: I sometimes regret not setting up NVME support, instead I have the OS on a USB SSD. That, a USB HDD, an ethernet cable, and USB keyboard mouse makes the IO a little crowded.

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 4 points 1 year ago

"How does your network availability compare with your expectations"

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I guessed it was a "once bitten twice shy" kind of thing. This is all a hobby to me so the cost-benefit, I think, is vastly different, nothing on my setup is critical. Keeping all those records and up to date on what version everything is on, and when updates are available and what those updates do and... sound like a whole lot of effort when currently my efforts can be better spent in other areas.

In my arrogance I just installed Watchtower, and accepted it can all come crashing down. When that happens I'll probably realise it's not so much effort after all.

That said I'm currently learning, so if something is going to be breaking my stuff, it's probably going to be me and not an update. Not to discredit your comment, it was informative and useful.

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 15 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

When I asked this question

So there are many reasons, and this is something I nowadays almost always do. But keep in mind that some of us have used Docker for our applications at work for over half a decade now. Some of these points might be relevant to you, others might seem or be unimportant.

  • The first and most important thing you gain is a declarative way to describe the environment (OS, dependencies, environment variables, configuration).
  • Then there is the packaging format. Containers are a way to package an application with its dependencies, and distribute it easily through the docker hub (or other registries). Redeploying is a matter of running a script and specifying the image and the tag (never use latest) of the image. You will never ask yourself again "What did I need to do to install this again? Run some random install.sh script off a github URL?".
  • Networking with docker is a bit hit and miss, but the big thing about it is that you can have whatever software running on any port inside the container, and expose it on another port on the host. Eg two apps run on port :8080 natively, and one of them will fail to start due to the port being taken. You can keep them running on their preferred ports, but expose one on 18080 and another on 19080 instead.
  • You keep your host simple and empty of installed software and packages. Less of a problem with apps that come packaged as native executables, but there are languages out there which will require you to install a runtime to be able to start the app. Think .NET, Java but there is also Python out there which requires you to install it on the host and have the versions be compatible (there are virtual environments for that but im going into too much detail already).

I am also new to self hosting, check my bio and post history for a giggle at how new I am, but I have taken advantage of all these points. I do use "latest" though, looking forward to seeing how that burns me later on.

But to add one more:- my system is robust, in that I can really break my containers (and I do), and to recover is a couple clicks in Portainer. Then I can try again, no harm done.

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 1 points 1 year ago

Finally got it set up, pointed Prowlarr at it which synced to Sonarr and Radarr, not readarr or lidarr though. I couldn't manually point readarr at it either without getting a

Query successful, but no results in the configured categories were returned from your indexer. This may be an issue with the indexer or your indexer category settings

which is a shame. Still a potentially powerful bit of kit regardless.

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 2 points 1 year ago

As well you should, you deserve to feel pretty as much as the next person.

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

I have been pretty

Even if you do say so yourself

Previous book was, House in the cerulean sea, I think maybe I read it at the exact wrong time in my life.

Currently re-reading The city and the city, almost finished. I enjoyed it the first time, less so the second I think.

I've got Illium lined up for a re-read next. I can't remember what I thought about it the first time through.

[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I use Mullvad and have a qbit go through gluetun. I don't mind the lack of port forwarding, as I leave the Pi on 24/7 and I'm not under ratio constraints. Also, my system isn't secure enough for me to be messing with that stuff, next build I'll get everything off root, set proper permissions, route everything through a single port etc, then think about port forwarding. For now I'll hide behind my ISP and Mullvad's security while I learn and make mistakes.

Down is quick enough for me and Up is slow but constant.

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