

It says “Hi”


It says “Hi”


Parallax depends on the focal length of the lens, and distance from the photographer. This looks real to me.
I’d wager it’s more likely staged with a wife of an ice agent and a photographer than AI.


Unraid has a table of the docker containers.
I don’t need metrics or stats. I wouldn’t look at, or care about them anyway. Dashboards feel like tech enthusiast crap. Tech and resources for the sake of having tech. My services are to solve a problem, not look at metrics of.


Mine is primarily a 4u server, in a rack. That’s screwed to the wall (for added stability).
They’d need a couple guys to unrack it. It’s in the garage I rarely ever lock, behind the cars which are more valuable and easier to steal. Behind the much more valuable tools.
Garage does get warm in the summer and cold enough in the winter the fans do funny things.
Anything important gets replicated to another location as well as backed up to a cloud bucket. So if it got stolen it would suck, but not the end of the world.


I just have my data folder and database being copied to backblaze. It’s relatively cheap. Most hosting providers don’t necessarily do backup unless you configure that on your own anyway.


It’s redundancy for hardware failure.
Mirroring is generally pretty bad for backup because it misses some of the most likely cause of data loss. Accidental deletions and malware such as ransomware.


Usb-c is really susceptible to dust building up in the port, especially on phones on pockets. They often need to be scrapped out to get rid of the lint.


I think reading the manual gives you the concept of what something is capable of doing. No one is saying memorize all the commands and their flags.
But if you read all of them, maybe some day you’ll have a problem and realize, wait… I’ve seen something like this before. And you can then look up the specifics.
I think so, but I really can’t remember exactly. I mostly remember playing shufflepuck cafe on it when I was young. The next computer we had was a Macintosh 7100. Before getting a gateway years later.
I’m pretty sure I still have some 3.5" floppies from them.
I wanna say my first PC that I used a was an Amiga with similar i/o as this: I remember that mouse connector vividly.



It’s been a long term build. With unraid it’s been pretty easy to slowly add disks one disk at a time.
I’m moving everything towards 22tb disks right now. It’s still got a handful of 4 and 5tb disks in it. I’ve ended up with a pile of smaller disks that I’ve pulled and just… sit around.
I also picked up a Synology recently that houses 12x 12tb disks that goes into that total count. I’ve got another couple Synologys just laying around unused.


Yep. It’s a 4u super micro chassis with the associated backplanes.
I had some servers left over from work. It’s set up to also take jbod cards with mini-sas to expand into additional shelf’s if I need that.
My setup really isn’t much of an entry setup. It’s similar to this: https://store.supermicro.com/us_en/4u-superstorage-ssg-641e-e1cr36h.html


I used to really like esxi, but broadcom screwed us on that.
Hyper-v sucks to run and manage. It’s also pretty bloated.
Proxmox is pretty awesome if you want full VMs. I’m gonna move everything I have onto it eventually.
For ease of use, if you have Synology that can run containers, it’s okay.
I also like and tend to use unraid at my house, but that’s more because of my insane storage requirements and how I upgrade with dissimilar disks fairly frequently. (I’m just shy of 500tb and my server holds 38 disks.)
Most of the oddities is due to focal length and not AI. Everything looks real to me, it’s just a weird angle and photographed with probably an actual camera and not a phone.