Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)ST
Posts
37
Comments
499
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I can't speak for the OP, but in my case.... It was very much a resounding YES!!!!! If your using Pis as general home servers, like I was, you can very quickly run into resource constraints. I wound up replacing 5 Pi 4's with a pair of 4th gen Intel boxes and I'm still hit resource limitations from time to time. Though now it is more io related then ram or cpu.

  • For me, only one. Doom 3. It's the only game that has managed to scare the shit out of me. I was expecting something similar to Doom (1993) or Doom II (1995) but with better graphics. Not complaining, great game but damn did they max out the creepy at the start of the game.

  • I'm not sure it will get that bad. Although, after accounting for inflation, you may not be far off on the price of such a "palace".

    I strongly suspect that we are at the start of a "rebalancing" here in the US. We are starting to see it in the labor market. Fewer people seem to be heading for degrees that aren't paying and are opting instead for the trades. Which, while good for them, the nation and the states, is going to kinda suck for me in a few years as the job market I'm in becomes more and more saturated and I get older and older.

  • Most people I know who use Graphene still use Google services and backend stuff. Just sand boxed so they have a bit more control.

    Personally, I'm still looking for something that isn't Google or Apple. Haven't found it yet.

  • Socialist, yes. Most of Europe is pretty heavily socialist.

    As far as communism goes though, not any at national scale. Where you tend to find actual communism tends to be in small, very tightly knit communities, but they don't usually call the structure of how their communities function "communism" and at least here in the US, would be "annoyed" were you foolish enough to describe how they live as communism.

  • Umm, yea. So?

    There is far more to recording good quality video footage then just the sensor and lens on the camera, just as there is far more to recording good quality audio then just using a mic with a good dynamic range. They are tools, they make things possible. But you can still get crappy results from multi-million dollar professional equipment if you don't do all (or at least many) of the other things needed to get good make good quality recordings.

    I'm more familiar with audio in a home studio setup rather then video, but if your interested in going down that rabbit hole here's some videos to get you started:

  • It’s probably not he solution you’re looking for, but I tend to put Proxmox on all of my hardware with TailScale installed on all my hosts, VMs and LXCs. So far I’ve only once had an issue where I couldn’t get into something. I borked the fstab on one of my Proxmox hosts.

    More in line with what you may be looking for, there is a project called PiKVM. It probably won’t help if you’ve borked your whole network, but it might be of some use. It is what it says on the tin. It’s a KVM based around a Raspberry Pi.

  • My goal is not so much to add authentication to VS Code ( I agree it’s built in function is fine for local network use and I likely would not be putting it on the open net), but rather to learn to use Authentik. In the end I would like all of my services (or rather, as many as possible) using a single login provider.

    Right now, I have 15 services running, each of which have their own authentication system with their own user names and passwords. It gets annoying, especially when my family members also use many of the services I run. I wanted a single place I could go to add and administer user accounts.

    I could do this many ways, (LDAP, Authelia, KeyCloak) but I chose Authentik because it appeares to support everything I currently run, with the possible exception of Home Assistant and Jellyfin.

  • one of the few printer companies that were Linux friendly.

    Ain't that the truth! I used to recommend HP printers just because of their Linux support because in all probability I would be tasked with fixing the printer when it broke.

  • Once upon a time, Hewlet Packard (HP) made great kit. Unfortunately that hasn't been true for at least the last 15 years. Nowadays everything they make, that I've looked at, seems to be utter trash. Brother is currently a good brand for printers if your in the market for one though.

  • Try looking into new builds. Part of the reason for the sky high housing market is that we haven't been building enough new housing for the last 30 years or so. Not saying that a new build house would be any cheaper, but most people just look at the cost of buying something that has already been built.