

My small low power self built NAS has HDDs for Jellyfin and no problems at all. Just a simple straight forward RAID1 created from countless online tutorials. Feel free to ask or contact me if you wanna know more of the software setup things.
My small low power self built NAS has HDDs for Jellyfin and no problems at all. Just a simple straight forward RAID1 created from countless online tutorials. Feel free to ask or contact me if you wanna know more of the software setup things.
Actually that usually is how it works. Unfortunately.
*Too big to fail" was probably made up by the big ones.
So the initiative here is the initiative itself.
Your city can probably afford it, but some can’t, or won’t. Initiatives like this get the ball rolling.
First, apologies for the late reply, I forget to check notifications here. On a tangent, it’s a lovely UI since it’s not pestering me to do this or that, but I do miss an occassional reply or two.
Now, to recap: I have asked you in my post, what software do you have right now? You said the family doesn’t want to sort the library twice - how do they sort this now? You said you host your photo collections on home servers, something something proxmox - the question is how do you get the photos there now? Because you might already have a solution.
If yes, tell us what your process looks like at the moment, and someone might have an advice. If no, if you have nothing right now, that’s okay too.
Yeah, but I like the “two weeks” one better, it waits at least four days until the next popup. The other one, the lil X, waits like four minutes
“abusive spouse” funny way to spell "government and “techbros”
I think it’s because the average person doesn’t understand about five words in your first sentence. They can understand marketing bull that they’re fed, though.
On a tangent, to me as an outsider it seems that most Americans are more likely to view anything as negative. I have no scientific backing for my shitpost though.
That really depends on the software you use. Some software might have a way to do it, but it may be indirect.
E.g. digikam is a photo library management software. It can move albums between “libraries”, and is designed that some of those libraries can be offline occasionally (more in the sense of SD cards, but also e.g. USB storage). So how you could do it is you map one, mountable, library to one disk, another to your “network storage” (however you attach your home server). That includes the metadata (depending on where and how you store it). And the digikam database itself is just a file as well (sqlite database), so you can also back that up at the same time. I’m not sure how to automate this process. Even a manual “cheat” - moving the files to network drive, then symlinking it back, per month or something, might work. It’s a bit of a manual process, but digikam is designed to be storage-based. And a lot of other software is, as well.
But again, I don’t know if you’re using digiikam or something else, and how you set it up. So, what software do you have? How do your users sync their photos and albums? That might help planning.
It’s 12, looks good to me.
Since when do Unix tools output 3,000 word long usage info? Even GNU tools don’t even come close…
[zlatko@dilj ~/Projects/galactic-bloodshed]$ man grep | wc -w
4297
[zlatko@dilj ~/Projects/galactic-bloodshed]$ man man | wc -w
4697
[zlatko@dilj ~/Projects/galactic-bloodshed]$
The article sure mentions 💩a lot.
01.01.1970. Timestamp zero for the win.
No problem!
As an aside, I see we’re bringing the strangers thing over from Reddit. I hope more of the fun and funny stuff gets over, I miss some of the light shitposting.
Why not just cd $XDG_DOWNLOAD_DIR
in the first place?
did you mean smuts?
XDG specifies the capital names, but to be nitpickingly technically precise, linux systems don’t do this. It mostly is done by the distribution maintainers, and the XDG specs. A base system does not usually have a notion of anything beyond your $HOME.
Try adding a user: sudo adduser basicuser
. If you ls -al ~basicuser
you will see it’s almost empty, just the .bashrc (or in my fedora, there’s some .mozilla crap in /etc/skel that also gets bootstrapped).
ln -s Downloads downloads FTW
I also never saw a calculation that took into amount my VPS costs. The fckers scrape half the internet, warming up every server in the world connected to the internet. How much energy is that?