What are your thoughts on TrueNAS Core or Unraid instead of Synology? I could still run Plex on the same hardware that handles the storage while maintaining the freedom and flexibility that my current home lab server provides. There appears to be plenty of decommissioned enterprise-grade hardware being sold on FB all the time.
keen1320
Again, pardon my ignorance when it comes to Kubernetes. Why would I use something like k0s instead of just regular old Docker? I suspect PCIe passthrough will have similar challenges on both k0s and Docker, whereas on Proxmox it's been relatively painless.
This might be better suited for a different community, in which case I'll make a post where appropriate. I'm not familiar with some of the Kubernetes terminology - batteries, pod/manifest (is this similar to stacks/docker compose?), NodePort?
I apologize for my ignorance when it comes to Kubernetes - I sort of wrote it off as complete overkill for a home lab when my very basic understanding was that it was essentially a load balancer. After some light research, I'm beginning to understand that it could be a better solution than a full-blown hypervisor.
If I understand your comment correctly, you're suggesting to simply run a lightweight distro and install k0s or k3s to run containers? What would be an ideal bare metal OS for this? What would be pros/cons to k0s vs k3s in a home lab environment, or is that simply a matter of personal preference? What would be the best way to connect to my media - SMB, NFS, something else? Or are the differences here irrelevant? Any concerns (permissions, IO latency) when passing an NFS mount from host into a container, or is there an even better way to do something like that entirely within the container?
First you have to convince him that the earth is more than 8000 years old.
The Fn and Carl keys can be switched in software. I have a work-issued Lenovo with a similar layout. They can be soft-swapped in the BIOS. There’s also a desktop utility to do the same but I don’t know if they have a Linux version of it. I totally agree, the physical layout is annoying but it has a simple fix.
Then this is false advertising and a class-action lawsuit that should have already happened.
This Arstechnica article seems to confirm that they can't decrypt without user intervention and that they have only ever supplied metadata to law enforcement. I'm no fan of Meta but do you have sources that they have in fact decrypted actual message content at the request of law enforcement?
No disagreement there. I could have clarified, my comment was in regard to message content only. I didn't realize that about metadata and certainly am not defending Meta. I'd prefer Signal over anything else but as others have mentioned, getting friends and family to adopt is painful.
It’s still E2EE, as far as I know. Meta could always remove that feature but until they do, I’d consider it a safe and private messaging platform.
Update on my SN30 Pro - I haven't noticed any Bluetooth input lag whatsoever. I'm using an RPi 3B (not 3B+). I read on the RetroPie forums that any input lag over BT can be mitigated by overclocking and also that it's less of an issue on the newer models, so if you're using a RPi 4 you will probably be fine with BT.
Agreed. I don't think there is a gamer on the planet who would balk at any extra cost to have hall effect sticks in every single controller. Can't imagine it adds more than a few dollars.
3rd party, 8BitDo seems to be the best/only option. They have both Bluetooth and 2.4GHz options. I have some concerns with Bluetooth input lag but I am expecting a Bluetooth SNES gamepad to arrive today so I can update with my experience later this evening.
Bluetooth
2.4GHz
They have some other controller options as well, but make sure you get one with enough buttons. Their 2.4GHz SNES controller only has the standard SNES buttons so you'd either have to sacrifice one button to use as Hotkey (typically Select) in which case you can't use that button in-game, OR you just won't have a Hotkey in which case you need a keyboard to exit emulation.
Then there's always standard Xbox and Playstation (and probably Switch Pro) controllers. 8BitDo sells a 2.4GHz adapter that is supposed to work with those first-party controllers, or if you have a newer Xbox controller it will have Bluetooth built-in.
Yep, I understand that. I didn’t know if RAID 6, having parity bits, would be able to repair a file from that data. I figured being RAID would protect it from corruption but apparently not. I didn’t overwrite the file with a bad one, it just stopped working.