Well, I started setting up my homelab on an old dell rackmount server I got for cheap, but then paused it for a year and electricity costs doubled. Costs half as much to run a droplet with what I need for now (server has like 200 cores, even idle it sucks juice)
I'll have forgotten all I know about kubernetes and prox mox by the time proces drop again 😔
Yeah, it's a shame to get rid of it, I'm usually happy to let it go crazy for a few months so the bees and birds have their way. But I learned about bramble growth the hard way. Didn't know they were vibes or they spread from the tips. Thought I could just chip the main stem and it wouldn't be a big deal. But it's had 2 summers now and when I cut the grass (or tried to) surprise!
The floor is bramble vines too. Like something out of a horror film, just kept pulling them up, ruined 2 pairs of gloves and 2 sets of secateurs , it's only a tiny garden! (And the first sets were never up to the task)
Luckily I have some other bushes and ferns for stuff to live in but I just don't have time to stay on top of the mechanical side to control it.
I wish someone had warned me before No Mow May about brambles.
1 shoulder injury and a year later I need chainmail gloves and a fucking flamethrower. I fill my green bin with brambles, by the time it's picked up they've grown back.
The main root is under a shed. I don't know how to eliminate it.
It's well worth learning, you can use vim motions In lots of apps (or they have vim plugins) and even some websites will let you navigate with hjkl and search with / etc
There used to be a web based vim game to help you learn, vim tutor maybe?
Any time I'm forced to select text with a mouse it feels like a massive ball ache.
Don't get me started on editing text on an iPad, they have gone out of their way to make selection and editing, like changing a URL, a total nightmare.
Theres a crazy show about his life on one of the streaming sites. Each episode leaves you stunned that so much can happen around one person, and what they can get away with.
Surprised you can even get such shit sensors anymore. Surely it's cheaper to get the mass produced HD+ ones nowadays? Or did someone find a warehouse of 90s trash?
Thanks I'll investigate cue.
Well, I started setting up my homelab on an old dell rackmount server I got for cheap, but then paused it for a year and electricity costs doubled. Costs half as much to run a droplet with what I need for now (server has like 200 cores, even idle it sucks juice)
I'll have forgotten all I know about kubernetes and prox mox by the time proces drop again 😔