Diplomjodler3

joined 10 months ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 hour ago

It's Hell 2.0. Now with more violence and no way out.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 hours ago (2 children)

I did that once and it wasn't a nice experience. Windows will always find ways to screw things up and you'll constantly be dealing with their shitfuckery. Outside of gaming there aren't really many reasons to stick with Windows and even gaming works great except on titles where it is explicitly sabotaged by the publishers. If you're dealing with an older laptop, this likely isn't a consideration anyway. If you're unsure whether Linux is for you, my advice would be to install it in a VM first and see if it works for you. Chances are, you won't miss Windows at all.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 hours ago

But there'll be a friendly announcement apologizing to the people about to be run over, right?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 hours ago

Just think of the Stalinist purges. Nobody is safe.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 14 hours ago

Actually looks better than a lot of stuff they've fielded there.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

But that's socialism!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

OK, I'm with you there. High speed trains are great for long distance transport and subways, light trails etc. are great for cities but they'll never replace cars. Self driving cars (or buses) are great in theory if they ever work. There is no one solution that fits all use cases. The reasonable thing to do is to work out what works best in which situation and then do that. Oh and cycle paths. We need a whole lot more of those.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 18 hours ago

We already have the 24 hour hate. It's called Fox News. And people watch voluntarily. Orwell must be spinning in his grave.

[–] [email protected] 55 points 19 hours ago (4 children)

They hate their own followers just as much as anybody else. Anybody who thinks the leopards won't eat their faces is delusional.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 19 hours ago

That was my point.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 19 hours ago (5 children)

Yeah, but the roadways are here now. And this discussion is moot anyway. Trains aren't happening. Self driving cars are maybe happening.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 19 hours ago (9 children)

Building railway tracks to achieve universal coverage for the entire US without be a massive undertaking that would require a huge effort over multiple decades. Compared to that, building self driving cars is downright trivial. Let's not forget that they exist already, albeit in limited areas. People should not let their (justified) anger at Musk blind them to reality.

 

After my last post got quite a lot of interest, I thought I'd do a follow-up. And, what can I say, it's been a journey:

Hardware

Installing the hardware was pretty easy. I'm just always a bit apprehensive about these things because I don't do this very often. But it went fine.

First boot

Nothing. No reaction at all. Well shit. After trying to reboot about 10 times, I removed all the drives one by one, but no change. I tried reseating the RAM but that also didn't do it. Then I left the machine alone for a few minutes while I was doing something else and suddenly I was in the BIOS. I'm not sure if it was the reseating or if it just needed some time for RAM training or something. Anyway, finally some result. So I put it all togther again and proceded to the next level.

Openmedivault installation

Plugged in the USB stick, it booted straight into the OMV installer. Then I hit a snag as it was trying to connect to the network. It only showed the Ethernet connections, no Wifi. But I hadn't plugged it in because my desk is not near the router. I wanted to set it up with Wifi and then plug it in at the router. First I thought the Wifi card is buggered. So I booted into a Linux Mint live system. It showed the Wifi card and connected without issue. I don't know if it's a driver issue or if OMV simply doesn't suppot Wifi. That would seem a bit silly, though. Maybe someone here has some insight? So anyway, after some very janky cable routing I managed to hook it up to both Ethernet and HDMI, after that the OMV installation went through without any problems.

Setting up the RAID

Well, in hindsight it was easy. Better documentation would really have helped, though. I created file systems on the disk first and thought I could then add these to the RAID. But what you have to do is download the RAID plugin first, then create the RAID and then create a file system with your disks. No problem if you know how to do it. But it took me a lot of searching and trial and error to figure that out. ** Sharing the Drive**

Next I created a shared folder and proceeded to mount it on my PC via NFS. That didn't go too well, as I could see the shared folder on the PC but didnt have write permission to put any data on it. After spending literally all evening trying out various permutations of NFS settings on both the server and client side, I finally figuered out that I had forgotten to set an ACL on the shared folder, which prevented me from accessing it on the client. Again, better documentation would have helped a lot there. Maybe it's out there and I just didn't find it.

What's next

So anyway, I have a functioning NAS now. Could have been easier but I guess that's just how it is round here. Next I want to set up some docker apps, like Jellyfin and paperless-ngx. Let's see how that goes. The main drawback so far is the noise. That thinhg is loud. Even when it's in a closet, the fan makes it difficult to be in the same room. That's definitely something I'll have to address. Someone suggested swapping out the fan but I'm not sure how I'd find one that is suitable. Any suggestions are welcome. If you guys are interested, I'll keep writing updates about my progress.

 

Da kann ja wirklich nichts, aber auch gar nichts schief gehen.

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submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

It's an Aoostar R1. A mini PC with an Intel N100 and two HDD drive bays. It's going to be my new NAS.

 

I just ordered an Aoostar R1N100 mini PC to replace my aging Synology NAS. Now I'm thinking about what to install on it. It's supposed to work as a NAS but I also want to host some services on it like papeless-ngx and Jellyfin, which I both run in Docker containers on a different machine right now. Plus anything that takes my fancy in the future. Current candidates are OpenMediaVault and TrueNAS. My priorities are ease of installation and administration, as well as reliability. Which one would you recommend or are there any alternatives I'm not aware of? I've also considered Unraid, but I'd prefer something FOSS.

 

While I think something like this makes sense, the pricing seems off. For $600 you can build a PC with a desktop GPU. If you want to make it easy to set up, you could just use an off the shelf mini-PC and preinstall everything so a non-technical user can get started without any hassle. I really hope we'll see more Steam machine like devices in the future.

 

I installed Pipewire a while ago to fix some audio problems. Now it's time for the 22 upgrade. Can I just run the upgrade or will the existing Pipewire installation cause problems? Has anyone done that already?

 

The hippy-dippy looney lefty guys from Lazard investment bank come to the conclusion that wind plus storage at its most expensive is still considerably cheaper than nuclear at its cheapest.

Source

 

The future is going to be great!

 

The brain drain continues. Who would have thought that people don't like to work for a delusional narcissistic asshole.

 

But of course we all know that the big manufacturers don't do this not because they can't but because they don't want to. Planned obsolescence is still very much the name of the game, despite all the bullshit they spout about sustainability.

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