[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 59 points 6 months ago

“Having escaped the lion’s den, Mr Lehrmann made the mistake of going back for his hat"

Is there any way this could have gone worse for him?

[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 7 points 8 months ago

I know a few folks in that situation - likely people who the originally designed fibre roll-out would have hit, but instead got a substandard connection.

I'm not so sure it's a full death spiral though, one would hope that the fibre retrofit can catch a lot of these up.

[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 6 points 1 year ago

Came in to criticise the writing too. Got AI or at least bad translation vibes. Really hard to follow.

[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 15 points 1 year ago

Deadloch would like to have a word.

But seriously, I can imagine 50% of people saying in the abstract they would like more locally produced content, though I'm not sure that it would actually affect purchasing behaviour.

[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 6 points 1 year ago

Is this actually unpopular? Give me web interface that works OK on mobile and I'm usually a happy camper.

[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 5 points 1 year ago

It's been quite a while since I played through SOTC, and maybe it's the passage of time but I recall the frustration being a minor part of the play and ultimately balancing itself nicely with the thrill of actually taking down the Colossus.

With that said even when I was playing it maybe 10 years back (so long after release) a lot of the control and feel had not aged well so I get where you're coming from.

[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Photoprism, running on a Raspberry Pi 4. I'm just running it as a single user, and it's been working well for that. A couple of notes:

  • Video transcoding is a bit iffy on the rpi, but I'm running it under docker and might just move it all to a mini pc at some point
  • I don't have it accessible publicly, but get to it online via Tailscale
  • No app, but the Web interface is good.
  • I'm currently running it in "read only" mode (mainly out of initial paranoia when trying it out, but it seems fine) so I have syncthing backing up the photos from my phone wirelessly and occasionally do an import of new images in.
[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 2 points 1 year ago

I've got a very similar setup now. Only recently adopted tailscale and was previously port tunnelling over SSH to access anything on the local network. SSH is still open, and am just waiting a bit to see if theres any cases where I need it before closing that out too.

Short story: If you don't need stuff open to the general public, just having Tailscale will probably cover you.

[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 7 points 1 year ago

Great to see!

I bought my last laptop a couple months before they started shipping to Australia last year (dang it...), but Framework will be high on the list next time.

[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 6 points 1 year ago

Yeah, I mean digg.com still technically exists...

[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 2 points 1 year ago

Same setup here. I've got a really basic script running nightly from cron. B2 is cheap as, and having an encrypted backup that's versioned is great for piece of mind.

At one point I was away from home and my (little rpi) server wasn't accessible, but with the restic repo up on B2 I was able to easily find a file I urgently needed remotely. It's awesome.

[-] notleigh@aussie.zone 3 points 1 year ago

Seconding Syncthing! You don't need a rpi to get started, but it's fantastic having it around as the always-on node you can use to sync multipe devices without them being online at the same time.

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notleigh

joined 1 year ago