[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 13 points 23 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago)

Tfw the 5000 population town you grew up in is mentioned on Lemmy 😳

[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 23 hours ago)

[Best I can do is Väla gift card](http://www.xn--kp-fka.com/ Väla presentkort - en uppskattad present - Väla https://www.vala.se/besok-oss/presentkort/)

(the shopping center this bus passes)

[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 19 points 6 days ago

That part of my brain still contains the phone numbers it once memorized.

5
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by chellomere@lemmy.world to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

So, I currently have a Netgear ReadyNAS 314 with 1 SSD, 3 HDDs, Intel Atom D2701 and 4GB RAM, running Debian 12, and since getting it I've been getting more into self hosting. What I have now is primarily too weak in the CPU and RAM department, but it could also use more HDDs. I'm aiming for 5-6 3.5 HDDs, 1 Nvme, 1 2.5" SSD.

What I'm currently running:

  • Samba and NFS server

  • OpenVPN

  • Jellyseerr/Jellyfin/*arr stack

  • Pangolin

  • Dawarich

  • Immich

  • rsnapshot

  • Homepage

And it's rather sluggish right now, and is almost filling up its 4GB of swap.

What I'd also like to be able to run/have:

  • Nextcloud

  • Transcoding (including ability to decode AV1, but preferably also encode)

  • Anything else I may want to run (working on degoogling myself)

  • ECC RAM (to prevent bitrot, I'm already running btrfs raid1 to prevent bitrot from faulty disks)

  • 1x 2.5G ethernet

If possible I'd like to have some room for upgradeability. I'm aiming for a low power build, that should be rather compact, especially not very wide unless I can find a better place in my office for it.

I'm looking at a Jonsbo N1 chassis (17cm wide) , but I'm also following a Readynas 626 (19cm wide) in an online auction. Options:

Intel N100 board

Pros: cheap, low power, quicksync with av1 decode

Cons: boards with 2.5G ethernet have to be ordered from Aliexpress and have no support and uses the JMB585 chip that prevents low power C states, limited pcie lanes, no AV1 encode, not very upgradeable (1 DIMM, soldered CPU) , no ECC, I worry it may be too slow

Intel 13100

Pros: AV1 decode, quite fast, upgradeable

Cons: No ECC, relatively expensive, no AV1 encode

AMD 8500G

Pros: AV1 enc/dec, ECC, relatively fast, upgradeable

Cons: relatively expensive, not as low power as the 13100

Readynas 626

Pros: enterprise grade HW, less DIY, ECC, may be relatively cheap

Cons: high power for its performance (roughly that of the N100), wider (19cm) than a Jonsbo N1 (17cm), not upgradeable (no CPU or mobo swap), expensive DDR4 2133 ECC UDIMM, doesn't have M.2 but has a PCIE slot

I'd love to hear what you think about these options and whether you have other concerns that I haven't thought about.

Edit: I just now realized that the 13100 doesn't have AV1 encode in HW, that didn't come until Core Ultra. And wowee, suitable mITX mobos start at 400$ here! I think AMD is the realistic choice if I want to go for AV1 HW encode...

[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 33 points 10 months ago

Backing up to a different partition on the same RAID array sounds like a good way to lose all your data.

The backup should be physically separate from the original.

[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 34 points 1 year ago

I think if they just filled the alt= attribute with the emoji this would copy fine.

[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 32 points 1 year ago

Unless there are security updates to install, then everything will be mercilessly killed

[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 29 points 2 years ago

Then comes a .tar.bz2 file along and you're screwed. xtract je vucking file?

Pro tip: -z, -j are not needed by tar anymore since many years, tar will autodetect what compression was used if your distro is anything remotely modern.

[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 33 points 2 years ago

At least in Sweden, decimeter and deciliter are very commonly used. They are rather convenient units of measurement.

[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 35 points 2 years ago

Under Santa's hat

[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 47 points 2 years ago

Turkish:

Left: sol, right: sağ

[-] chellomere@lemmy.world 37 points 2 years ago

I'm running ZRAM on my old Netgear ReadyNAS's, which has 512MB or 256MB RAM. It enables them to do a lot more than they otherwise would be able to, running a modern linux distribution.

I've been so satisfied with it that I even started running it on my modern desktop with 32GB RAM, it helps with my tab addiction :)

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BEANS (lemmy.world)
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Donatello (lemmy.world)
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submitted 2 years ago by chellomere@lemmy.world to c/memes@lemmy.ml

I think I can, I think I can

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chellomere

joined 2 years ago