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3 yr. ago

  • Architectural blueprints have been explicitly covered by copyright in the US since 1990, but were likely implicitly covered before then.

    He could always provide an open-source license before claiming that he is "open sourcing" his designs. You could always check for a license before claiming that something is open-source. Putting the onus on people after the fact to make those previous claims true doesn't make any sense.

  • very cool. don't see a license, though. no open source license => not open source.

  • By percentage of fossil fuel use per area? By watts of fossil fuels? By CO2-equivalent estimated emissions in a given area? Normalized by population somehow?

    There is a lot missing here that is necessary to make it a meaningful plot.

  • This is pretty, but what is the point of it?

  • Now that I'm deep in it with flakes + home manager + impermanence + disko/nixos-anywhere, it's fantastic having this much control and stability on all my systems, and I'm excited to start switching as much of my homelab as I can over to NixOS like my workstations.

    But I totally agree, I would not recommend this to anyone who is not super interested in it.

  • And the Luddites were right

  • Fitting a 100W battery in the 13 inch chassis while keeping everything easily serviceable would be impossible

  • My plan to handle this is to switch my VMs to NixOS, set up NixOS with impermanence using a btrfs or zfs volume that gets backed up and wiped at every startup with another that holds persistent data that also gets backed up, and just reboot once per day.

    I'm currently learning how to do impermanence in all the different ways, so this is a long goal, but Nix config + backups should handle everything.

  • I use a Ryzen 5900x, RTX 3080, 2x 10Gbit sfp+ NIC, 128GB ECC RAM, and only 2x 20TB drives at the moment.

    For my gateway, I have an Intel N6005 box, I have a managed 2.5/10Gbit switch, and I have a wifi AP.

    I have a ton of Proxmox VMs and containers.

    All that hovers between 140W to 180W

  • To make life easier for yourself, I'd highly recommend running Linux on a separate drive. The Linux distribution installers I've used will install the bootloader on whatever drive you choose to install on, but the windows installer will use the storage controller's port ordering to choose which drive to install on.

    Your best bet is to simply disconnect the Windows drive when installing Linux and to disconnect the Linux drive when installing Windows, then just use the BIOS boot selection screen to choose which OS to boot into.

    You can add your Windows drive to Grub and you might be able to add your Linux distro to your Windows bootloader, but keeping them entirely separate is probably best.

  • I preordered the new screen for my 2nd-gen. This is all great news!

  • I use porkbun for my domains, cloudflare for dns, ddclient connecting to the cloudflare api for dynamic dns, and traefik as a reverse proxy to send subdomains to their respective service.

    The only part I have to pay for is the porkbun domain.

    $8 for a year is a good deal, but be ready to switch when that expires.

  • Yeah, I tried it with hyprland and COSMIC. I'm currently using KDE, but if I get enough energy to configure hyprland on NixOS, I'll switch to that. COSMIC wouldn't let me use Steam, so I had to switch back to KDE. Tiling on COSMIC was really nice, though.

  • I run a DualUp as well. I love it

  • removed

    Jump
  • Once HedgeDoc 2.0 comes out with the "Explore" page, I'm pretty sure that will take over for Obsidian for me. I have played around with all the fancy features in Obsidian, I just don't think I need the majority of them.