Blocky does look nice, but there is no way to use it without any upstream DNS server, which limits its usefulness. Technitium works without having to rely on third-party DNS services, which is its main selling point, I guess.
My backup server is the only one of my servers that is located outside Germany. You know, in case the British come again. Or the data centre of my other servers burns down. Or something like that.
Every night, this server receives a (compressed, incremental) backup of the most important data (content and configuration files) from each of my other servers, which I created with Borg.
I’ve had quite a few spicy Scotches in the past. I’ll try to compare the New Riff during our next monthly whisky tasting round, assuming we’ll have a few ryed ones. We usually do. :-)
They make so much beer of their own anyway, and a lot of it is pretty damn good, so why bother importing?
My favourite bar imported about a dozen US beers last year, simply for the sake of variety. However, the price-performance ratio is a bit exaggerated - US imports are expensive.
Ah, that's right - bourbon! I (arrogant Scotch snob) always forget that. Ironic coincidence: WhiskyJason tried to get me interested in New Riff at a whisky fair. It worked: I'll get a bottle in the post tomorrow. It's pretty nice stuff.
Iyengar said he struck up a conversation with Lockheed Martin recruiters, mentioning that he would not be comfortable working on projects complicit in Israel’s military offense. Iyengar said he was trying to think deeply about the impact of science and engineering, and to learn about Lockheed Martin’s mission.
There is no obvious way to install Hoarder on an unsupported platform. My servers run OpenBSD and OmniOS. Both of them don't even have any Docker support. (Which is not something I'd absolutely need, to be honest.)
Hoarder runs on Node.js. I will use Lisp (edit: or Rust, but I'm positive I'll beat Lisp's session management some time soon). Node.js is a dependency hell.
Hoarder does not really encourage manual and/or regex-based tagging, it strongly suggests relying on "artificial intelligence". As I am rather disappointed by what "artificial intelligence" is currently able to do, I'd prefer to default to the old approach.
Of course, all of this is just a personal preference.
Blocky does look nice, but there is no way to use it without any upstream DNS server, which limits its usefulness. Technitium works without having to rely on third-party DNS services, which is its main selling point, I guess.