maus

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 7 points 1 month ago

I plan to continue using readarr with rreading-glasses until a suitable replacement appears.

Only other alternative I'm aware of is LazyLibrarian which is what readarr set out to replace. I use it to pipe top selling book feeds into readarr lists to auto add new books.

[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 3 points 1 month ago

Out of the box?

Fedora Workstation for my VM desktops. For servers usually Ubuntu just because it just works, but for running containers on systems with limited resources? Alphine.

[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 13 points 2 months ago

Like others have stated. Navidrome. It's the only open sources backend I've found to properly handle my ~14TB music library without having performance issues.

[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Every part of your comment is wrong or false. Air, O, Proton. There's 3 that are "mainstream".

There's multitudes of smaller providers that allow it.

Mullvad removed it because of CP and extremist content being hosted behind mullvad. It had nothing to do with torrenting as they had no problem with it for the many years.

Many countries don't even acknowledge DMCA. Some have their own that have higher criteria for enforcement like the NL, others just don't care. Hosted many things out of Vietnam, Kosovo, Hungary, etc.

[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 1 points 3 months ago

This is what I use, the 36 month pricing is just so cheap. Probably run 50-80TB of traffic through it a month for years without any problem.

Really like the dynamic wire guard configs that allows you to bounce between servers in a small geographic area. Perfect for keeping private tracker admins happy

[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 4 points 3 months ago

Lol my home hosted seedbox would break that 10TB limit at least x5 over in a month. Absolutely ridiculously low limit for calling something "unlimited".

I'm glad Air doesn't care how many TB I'm uploading a month.

[–] maus@sh.itjust.works -1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Using Jellyfin is a punishment in itself.

[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You obviously didn't read the article.

[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 10 points 1 year ago

Must be an old screenshot because there's now half a page of Gemini AI garbage at the very top now.

Highly recommend using the uBlacklist extensions to filter out the garbage, spam, copycat, useless sites that somehow seem to always beat out legitimate sources in SEO.

[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 0 points 2 years ago

The entire pandemic, our security operations team got constant commendations for how rapidly we scaled up, and they touted the increased productivity we had WFH. I was officially reclassified as a remote worker at the start of Covid.

Then we got a new manager after 2 years who decided everyone needed to RTO "as needed", then monthly, then weekly.

My disabilities and medication prevents me from safely operating a vehicle to commute and my respiratory disability puts me at an extremely high risk of complications from Covid (was bedrested for 3 days from Covid, took almost a month to mostly recover, after multiple booster shots).

Tried to get accommodation, which I had never had to formally get before. Was surprisingly easy to get from HR, but my manager on the other hand made my life hell.

My manager, though, pulled out all the stops.

  • He submitted a "request for family leave" for every workday that I was working from home instead of the office while I was working through HR accommodation request process. which I only found out about after HR mailed me a letter formally denying the requests.
  • Then my manager straight up told me, "I think the only reason you put in a request for accommodation is to avoid coming into the office"
  • Manager would "Forget" to invite only me to meetings, when others that were WFH due to illnesses like Covid would get an invite.

Jokes on them, though, I left with a very short notice, little to no documentation on key projects that I was the sole driver and maintainer on. Literally left 2-year project with 2 pages of documentation that weren't even up to date.

  • Went from making $100K total comp to over $150K total comp.
  • Insurance is kickass, talking like $400/m medication only costing $15/m with no deductible.
  • Nice RSU package, 60k over 4 years
  • No after-hours or on-call, no SLAs
[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 years ago

Pretty scummy overall, but average user probably doesn't understand the drives could fail at any moment and that the older the drives age the more likely it will fail.

Regardless though, it would better serve to warn users to have a backup of their data than just a blanket age-shaming.

[–] maus@sh.itjust.works 5 points 2 years ago

My SO has used Pixel phones exclusively since they first came out and every single one somehow seemed to update every week and progressively get buggies.

And the hardware is even worse. Already RMA'd her first Pixel 6 Pro, thought we'd have to RMA it again last week because the gyro was stuck on the y axis (luckily dropping it fixed the issue for now).

Battery life has been incredibly poor comparing to any other comparable phones. Signal strength likewise having issues even in a urban city of 300k people.

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