

unrelated: ever heard of draw.io? excalidraw, even.


unrelated: ever heard of draw.io? excalidraw, even.
{ "ok": false }


Exactly what are you trying to back up? If it’s for something like, let’s say, a password manager, syncing is the worst way imaginable.
But if it’s for your Jellyfin media backup, rsync is pretty sufficient imo. They rarely change, costs pretty penny to back up and (relatively) easy to rebuild.
So it all comes down to what your scenario is.


Linkwarden has pretty minimal hardware requirements - it was tested on a VPS with 4gb of memory and it ran pretty smoothly, the most intense part is when you build the app, but once it’s running it’s relatively lightweight.
From their website. I wouldn’t consider tested on 4gb vps having minimal hardware.
I use Linkding and I am very happy with it. Less feature? Maybe. But it’s a bookmark sync. What do you need?
Wait until you type top


imo paying devs to review vibe coded bile would not work either. At best, the dev themselves should do the vibe coding.
Someone who has no clue whatsoever in terms of programming cannot give it the right prompt.
how are stablecoins better than just plain ol’ bitcoin?
They’re not better. They’re fundamentally different.
How do they keep the value at $1 USD?
That’s the secret. They don’t. All we have is a said pinky swear. Stable coins are not truely stable.
But what is? USD is not truly stable in terms of its value either.
It can mean a lot of things, but mostly, USDT/USDC are the two most used ones and are what we would normally call stable coins.
It’s simple: $1 per 1 USDT/USDC. A company pinky swears that it will pay you the money when coins are presented to them. So basically they are printing money with their credit.
It has its value, though. It is certainly easier than any other means of transferring money overseas and is actively used.


me: all pop musics sound the same
also me:
No sane selfhoster should do this. This is far beyond being overkill.


Pre installed hardwares. It’s not just about “being easy to use” or “working software X”. 90% of the users are not going to install Linux themselves, because they have no idea that Windows is something that can be replaced like any other softwares.
Even then, they’d not just begrudgingly use Linux because it was preinstalled. They’d find tech support and complain about how everything’s just completely changed and they want their normal PC back.
So no, Linux desktop will stay niche no matter how it gets, at least for a long time. Something as braindead simple as ChromeOS may help though.


There is absolutely no way you can avoid GH hosted project completely. It’s like trying to buy a phone without Chinese parts.


Not sure how the new Pi5 is but Pi4 struggles quite a bit with Nextcloud. Nextcloud is not really designed to run on low-end devices, let alone an SBC. It may seem fine for the first time but when you actually try to do something, it’ll get sluggish and oftentimes downright completely fail.
I stopped using my Pi4 for anything file related but I guess there might be something that it can reliably run(I’m guessing Syncthing).


I know. But coming out of the box is nicer.


Rocky Linux. Been using debian but I like firewalld a bit more than ufw, and I don’t trust myself enough to let myself touch iptable.
Happened to me once. Had a little Pi at my parent’s house and that was a nice excuse to visit them.


I built a website that uses ChatGPT API for no particular reason whatsoever. Can I slap AI-native on my resume?
what the fuck is this ai slop shit?