The greater good
Swarfega
14 years ago my wife hired me an Aston Martin DB9 for a weekend as it was my favourite car. Absolutely loved it. That said it wasn't a car I'd like for every day use. It was a hard ride and the heat from the engine came into the cockpit. My legs felt like they were on fire.
Supercars are usually great to play in but for day to day absolutely crap. I couldn't take it to the shop as I'd worry about it getting marked. People get jealous and go out of their way to ding nice cars.
Saving that for the next repost
I don't disagree.
For the first time, I am actually dual booting with Mint and using it. Honestly, it wouldn't be a thing without Proton. Props to Valve!
Incoming the switch to Linux tribe...
We have these where I live (UK). We generally have a small kitchen bin, with a degradable liner, that you use to put your scraps in. You then transfer this to the outdoor organic bin.
Honestly it's way better than having it in your main trash. In the summer you can expect to see flies leaving eggs around the edge of the outdoor bin as they can obviously smell the contents. If you do leave the lid slightly open then yes you'll get maggots.
When I was younger, everything went in one bin. Collected weekly. Then we got the recycle bin which changed for bi weekly collections for both bins. When I moved we now have a recycle bag, a paper and glass box and the food bin. We obviously also have a regular bin. The recycle stuff is taken weekly. The normal bin is taken once every three weeks. At the time I was like there's no way we can last three weeks, however if you recycle properly then it's easily manageable. It's so much better to send less stuff to landfill.
The organic waste that is collected is sent to be used for more than just compost. You can obviously have a composter at home too though.
Actually, the OS runs from SD and for mass storage I have a single USB drive. The container's data is stored on the USB drive along with the docker-compose.yml file. So if I lose the SD it's just a case of reloading the OS, installing docker and docker-compose. Configuring the disk to mount on boot and then running docker-compose to get back up and running.
Docker data is sent via rsync to a Pi Zero should the USB drive fail. Plex/Jellyfin content I don't care too much about as they can be "obtained" again 😉
From the first boot it's only a few lines to get docker installed ready for running containers. Containers are awesome!
There isn't a problem. It just consumed more memory than I'd have liked.
I've just powered on the container and the system went from 1.75G to 2.47G consumed. This is when it's idle.
I've just stopped the Plex container and memory usage is now 2.40G. Plex is definitely more lightweight in comparison.
I've been running Plex on a Pi 3 and now Pi 4 along with multiple other containers with no real problems. I don't transcode obviously but have no issues with performance.
I also installed Jellyfin last week to run side by side but ended up uninstalling as even when idle the memory usage went through the roof.
Looks like they all try to run after someone raises the alarm. Unlucky for him he ran into danger.
Have you configured your OS to use a higher refresh rate in monitor settings? The difference is night and day...
Why are we still reading about this asshole?