

The main one is how it handles corruption. It has actively been designed to do the exact opposite of what a sane filesystem should do and maximises downtime.
The main one is how it handles corruption. It has actively been designed to do the exact opposite of what a sane filesystem should do and maximises downtime.
Broken Terrible wRetched Fucking Shit
What’s your stereo you’re connecting the record player to?
I still maintain that Emby is better than Jellyfin. I try it again maybe once a year and every time I end up back on Emby. It just runs better, works pretty flawlessly and doesn’t lose my libraries every so often. Music playback is better by far on Emby and that’s my main usecase.
Hardware decoding would be nice, but I don’t have a system I could use this on for either and I’ve not had trouble without it.
I really only used it for syncing photos from my phone so I went to Syncthing. The NC web interface I found far too slow to be any use, so I just mount network shares over NFS.
And that is why I no longer run Nextcloud
I aint typing out ‘please’, I will compromise on alias plz='sudo'
Kubuntu. It’s solid and similar enough to Windows UI-wise. Everyone should start there and later people can explore other options if they want.
I would actually vomit, which as we all know, is the true sign of romance.
RAID does not work today with any disks you may have: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l55GfAwa8RI
.The only sane option is ZFS with zRAID1/2.
An HBA with the SAS cables should run to about £50 used.
Sounds like a good plan to me
I’ve switched to restic for my backups and have been very happy with it. Very fast, encrypted and snapshot history.
RAID gives you greater uptime. That is all. You should also have backups. So how much uptime do you need?
Affects: TP-Link TL-WR940N router, specifically affecting hardware versions 3 and 4 with all firmware up to the latest version.
Backups only used blocks. Backup to or from various locations, NFS shares, ftp, WebDAV, ssh server, samba, etc. Encryption of the images, backup of single partitions or whole disks.
If you want to deploy to several machines at once it also has a load of tools for that too.
You 100% want to use Clonezilla for this job. It should be on everyone’s Ventoy stick.
Ubuntu Server LTS releases are unbelievably good. They are absolutely solid as a rock. I’ve had several VMs running it for almost a decade with zero issues.
Ubuntu desktop doesn’t suit my use case though,and nor does Gnome.
Who has more chance of a single disk failing today: me with 6 disks, or Backblaze with their 300,000 drives?
Same thing works with 6 vs 2.
alias
your way to something you like