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Grenfur, in What hobbies help you minimize or avoid navigating commercialism?

Recently I’ve taken to self hosting. It started with me just wanting a raspberry pi for pi-hole and has developed into a full hobby. Because so many of these services are FOSS and can run on a toaster it’s helped me immensely with avoiding commercial fatigue. I also find that the communities for the hobby are insightful and, because the solutions are free, they aren’t selling you on a product. They’re just passionate about the service, distro, or setup that they use.

I’ve also learned a ton of applicable skills for adult life, so happy side-effects.

weeeeum,

What do you recommend hosting because oddly enough I already want a server but I don’t know what to host. I feel it’s such a waste to burn electricity just to produce heat since using electricity in any capacity produces heat so I would literally use my server as a space heater.

I thought of hosting a Minecraft server for friends (or even friends of friends) and folding @ home as well. I already have a computer much better suited for file hosting so I would not need more of that.

Grenfur,

What will you be hosting on? I started with a raspberry pi. It was important to me to host on something outside my main machine. I chose the pi because it would run linux, use very little electricity, and would remain out of the way.

Initially it was for pi-hole. Which is a network wide DNS filter used to block ads (with some exceptions like YT). That got me more interested in my own privacy. So, I added a searx instance to my pi. It’s an aggregate search engine that searches a bunch of search engines and won’t track me. Or at least I’m tracking myself.

I’ve never run a minecraft server on a pi but I have a friend who has. It was fine for up to about 4 people.

From there I actually built a rig specifically for hosting. It’s a little more stout than the pi. On it I run Proxmox (which I use to create linux containers for the other things I host). I do run a file share on it. It’s nice because it’s easy to run weekly backups so I don’t lose things. I also run a vpn, qbittorrent (for linux isos), jackett (indexes torrents), sonarr (used to… find movies I’m missing), jellyfin (to watch said movies anywhere in the house) and finally I do host a valheim server there for my friend’s and I.

Honestly I would at least start with a dedicated machine for it, maybe an old laptop, a pi, just anything cheap that if you screw up you can wipe and start over. From there: pi hole, seaex, retro game box maybe? There’s really a lot of things you can host. Find a need you have a Google a linux solution for it. There’s almost always one.

weeeeum,

I work as a computer repair technician and my workplace has some really old cheap (90$) server hardware for sale. They have 32gb of DDR3 and old dual xeon 5606. I would probably upgrade them because old xeons are dirt cheap. They also have some old workstations too that could be suitable for hosting, similar amounts of ram but new processors.

Not energy efficient but that’s fine since they would literally be a space heater, and if maxed out those old CPUs can still get some work done.

Grenfur, (edited )

Honestly, that’s not bad for a start. That Xeon should be fine for most things. I run an amd 4650g pro and never get close to using it all.

Side Note: The people over at !selfhosted have been immensely helpful for me in my brief journey so far.

DABDA, in What is the most terryifying siren noise?
@DABDA@lemmy.world avatar
FauxPseudo, in What hobbies help you minimize or avoid navigating commercialism?
@FauxPseudo@lemmy.world avatar

Wood working. Whittling. You can buy very expensive tools or you can go old school and pick up used 100 year old ones for nothing or even make your own. You can buy wood or you can salvage it.

weeeeum,

I agree tremendously. Additionally Japanese woodworking is pretty much devoid of commercialization entirely. Tools tend to be judged by their undeniable quality and the reputation of the blacksmith who forged it.

Additionally to avoid commercialization in western wood working (aside from buying vintage) is making a lot of your own tools. One of the most important rules in wood working is to buy tools that allow you to make more tools. So go ahead and buy some chisel blanks and make some handles, buy a vice screw and build your own leg vice (coincidentally the leg vice is almost extinct today due to commercialization of the cast iron vice, despite performing worse than the leg vice). Build your own bench, clamps (use some hardware kits) and if you have some guts you can cut your very own wooden planes and fit an aftermarket blade.

It’s a lot of work but it’s very rewarding and there is a tremendous amount of pride when using tools you make/restore yourself.

NeoNachtwaechter, in What is the most terryifying siren noise?

The most terrifying siren is the one of a dive bomber.

giraffedesigner, in What hobbies help you minimize or avoid navigating commercialism?

I sew my own clothing amongst other things and am generally crafty (woodworking, etc).

I don’t know if it’s possible to completely avoid consumerism (gotta buy the fabric, materials, etc) but it’s a lot easier to find things to repurpose. I have made clothing out of old bedsheets and curtains, for example. People repurpose pallet wood all the time as well.

thirdBreakfast,
@thirdBreakfast@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t sew, but a follow several people who do (for vintage and modern clothing) on Instagram - just to emotionally vampire off their irrepressible happiness when it all comes together and they make something that comes out as great as they imagined (lots of “and it has pockets!!!” moments) or they master a new skill they had been struggling with - like sewing button holes in denim or whatever.

It’s not for me, but I love the obvious satisfaction and joy other people are getting out of it.

pedz, in What is the most terryifying siren noise?

The multilingual emergency messages with the high pitched beeps on cruise ships.

I’ve never been on a cruise but I’ve seen a few videos and documentaries and always find this terrifying. You have nowhere to run to but a muster station. Like, you may drown while hearing a foreign language that you can’t understand but is somehow telling you to GFTO.

Starbuck, in Best way to go about getting CompTIA certifications?

What kind of job are you looking for?

A+ is for help desk type folks. I wouldn’t really see that as relevant for a developer with 8 years of experience. I would assume you got it early in your career and still list it for whatever reason.

thefloweracidic,

Really just any job, the A+ idea was a back up plan at best, and at worst just another buzzword to get my resume picked by automation

Starbuck,

Maybe try for something more appropriate for your experience so far that demonstrates you branching out into higher skills. CKAD for example.

Bye, in What hobbies help you minimize or avoid navigating commercialism?

Playing magic cards. I just print them all off at the library

xia, in What is the most terryifying siren noise?

Terror? Carbon monoxide alarm. Less for the sound, and more for the mental strife after what you are 99% sure it is a false alarm… as that 1% doubt (that might kill you in your sleep) keeps you from sleeping.

A_Random_Idiot, in What is the most terryifying siren noise?

Anything that wakes you up at 3am during a moment of political strife, I think.

Adramis, (edited ) in What is the most terryifying siren noise?
FrickAndMortar, in What hobbies help you minimize or avoid navigating commercialism?

Get yourself a speed loom for $20 and some thread or embroidery floss, and you can darn socks! This was my pandemic “learn a new skill”, and now the whole family brings me socks with holes, to fix.

And the “best” part is that cheap socks wear out around the patch, so then you get to / have to darn them again!

Tutorial:

youtu.be/qhPUjTxQgHA?si=L2hUlL7IBxboQ59L

Rhynoplaz, in [SOLVED] Looking for a specific Droopy(?) cartoon

Can you describe the bad guys? I don’t know if I can help but I do seem to have a mental catalogue of old cartoons that’s bigger than most.

ICastFist,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

I vaguely recall them being two other dogs, but my memory’s really fuzzy on that detail.

Siethron, in What is the most terryifying siren noise?

Probably one that draws you toward it almost mystically.

Switchblade, in What is the most terryifying siren noise?

Federal signal whoop sound.. Fairly standard equipment in heavy industry for emergency alarms.

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