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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)Z
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2 yr. ago

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  • Conservative is a misnomer used for propaganda purposes.After all conservative aren't really in the game of conserving.

  • Thank you!

  • Not that I'd be aware of, sorry.But maybe someone else can point us into the right direction.

  • Hi there,I just wanted to stop by and say it was a pleasure to read your story.Well done!

  • Yes, it's small, runs at a few watts and is silent.The Celeron J4105 and Pentium J5005 CPUs in the Wyse 5070 are very close to each other both regarding energy and computing power.Have a look here: https://www.cpu-monkey.com/de/compare_cpu-intel_celeron_j4105-vs-intel_pentium_silver_j5005I would take either.You'll have a hard time finding another silent box with such a small footprint that's able to take 2 gumstick drives - even if one of them needs some tinkering - and 32 GB RAM.

  • You could try to get a used Dell Wyse 5070.If you pick the right dual ranked RAM modules (e.g. Patriot PSD416G26662S), you can have a max. of 2x16 GB.There's a slot for SATA SSDs onboard and with the right adapter (PCIe A/E key -> M key) you can plug an NVME SSD in the WiFi PCIe slot, which gives plenty room for storage and even allow for a disk mirror setup.All that is very well within your budget and quite a beast that once was meant to be just a thin client.

  • I believe you're right, but that doesn't solve the problem of making routine full backups, which would come in handy if the device gets lost or breaks.One can hope future versions of Seedvault care less about what apps want.

  • I'm being bugged by Seedvault caring for apps that have a 'don't backup app data' flag.I could live with that being a default setting, which can be manually overwritten in the Seedvault settings for these apps.Apps not allowing (in case of Seedvault: encrypted) full backups while offering no or bad built-in backups is just cumbersome when trying to have current backups.

  • Well, some people read something different into my comment. I better delete it, before I create any more confusion...

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  • Oh, they can go in one sentence, if done right.Nano offers fast transactions on a decentralized network while using very little energy.Strictly speaking it's not just one blockchain, but one per account, which only the account owner can update (add blocks to it).This asynchronous design is what makes Nano so fast, because there's no need to wait for others when updating one's own blockchain.What it doesn't have (yet?) is a sufficiently large network effect, which it may never acquire.But it is one example of an attempt at making digital money based on blockchain technology, which is not just a copycat, scam, rugpull or other malicious nonsense.Monero comes to mind as well and maybe a handful others.Sadly almost all around blockchain is not just not innovative, but outright evil.

  • Apparently sometimes leaning on amendments of the constitution is required to protect said constitution and hence the people protected by it.

  • If one takes beta-carotene instead of vitamin a, an existing deficiency can be resolved without introducing any risk of reaching toxic levels.

  • Unless you find/invent a new procedure that's way more efficient instead of doing more cycles of known procedures.

  • If you want to save energy, consider launching him outside our solar system instead.I'd be fine with both though and even grant him the trip to Mars of which he apparently dreamt some time ago.

  • A broken clock may be forever wrong, whereas a stopped clock may be right twice per day.

  • Then I would stick with ZFS if you're already familiar with it.

    I'm not at all familiar with ZFS. It'd be part of the learning curve as is Proxmox as a whole. But I consider knowledge about both as useful.

    LXD is a management system for LXC containers. If you're just starting out, stick, with LXD. It's much more user friendly.

    I will stick with LXD for containers then if I don't use a VM.

    Not really. I run a VPS which acts as a reverse proxy for my docker setup, which has non-local storage via NAS. I don't particularly see a point in fragmenting docker like that, but if that's how you want to roll, then go for it.

    This due to my lack of experience with Docker and backing up all properly to do a complete restore. It looks like I have learning curves in more than just one area ahead of me.

    I very strong advise against this. But it's perfectly possible. You're just at the whim of the airwaves. I live near a main highway and sometimes when large trucks go by, I lose WiFi for a quick second. Really fucks with certain things.

    Yeah, nothing beats a setup, where each network interface is the maximum size of a collision domain.

    Yes. Nothing wrong with software firewalls.

    Gotta get ahead of that old school me that thinks running a software on a different hardware plays a crucial role in the threat model.

    Also yes. Particularly (like I have setup) I have a software firewall that tunnels my local vLAN to my VPS, and then everything else is further bisected using a hardware firewall--so all outside incoming requests are proxified by my VPS meaning any direct connections are dropped by the software firewall, then I manage ports from within the hardware switch.

    That's a setup I may borrow from you :)