It’s undergoing massive development, it basically went from nothing to nearly full featured in two years.
The breaking change just means you need to actually do something before updating. The software isn’t quite ready to be put on auto-update yet. Honestly the way the devs aren’t afraid to break things I think has contributed to the fast development.
Just be sure to keep a secondary backup of your photos which you should do either way.
From what I read disk wear out on consumer drives is a concern when using ZFS for boot drives with proxmox. I don’t know if the issues are exaggerated, but to be safe I ended up picking up some used enterprise SSDs off eBay for that reason.
I have two Proxmox hosts and two NASes. All are connected at 1Gbps.
The Proxmox hosts maintain the real network mounts - nfs in my case - for the NAS shares. Inside each CT that requires them, these are mapped to mount points with identical paths in each, eg. /storage/nas1 and /storage/nas2.
All my *arr (and downloader) CTs are configured to use the exact same paths.
It’s seamless. nzbget or deluge download to the same parent folders that my *arr CTs work with, which means atomic renames/moves are pretty much instant. The only real network traffic is from the download CTs to the NASes.
Edit: my downloader CTs download directly to the NAS paths - no intermediate disk at all.
Nope. Full self hosted livestreaming. I personally use it to stream games. I started a communit at !owncast/lemmy.world and I’ve listed a few different streams. Some folks game, classic movies, music, etc. It’s your own self hosted Twitch or YT streaming, etc.
I’m not understanding what you’re stating. Me streaming a video game isn’t blogging. If you mean that there isn’t a list of folks all streaming, well there’s directory.owncast.com to find folks. If you mean only you can stream to it, well that’s not true as you can set up multiple stream keys and allow others to stream to it as well. So I’m really not understanding what you’re stating.
dont want to get into a semantic argument about how you distribute data. but if you have a site where you post your own personal shit all the time, including 'streaming', youre doing nothing different than 'blogs' from 20 years ago. the number of viewsers/casters is irrelevant.
yes, i love all the new tech. its just funny how we keep renaming the same pieces.
streaming is just yesterdays podcasts which were everyones vlogs before that. its all the same shit.
i just found it funny they owncast guy claimed to not be able to 'talk' about his 'blog + video'
This is literally the self-hosted community. I’m talking about self-hosted livestreaming platform. If you want to call it a blog + video, ok sure. Everything is basically a rehash of everything else. Just trying to share some self-hosted information. And I’m not the dev of Owncast or anything, just someone trying to make others aware of self-hosting software.
@originalucifer@ozoned hm.. Why do you call it blog then? It's just someone's web page with text, pictures and video published to it. Languages evolves and new words can describe new implementations better.
it was about communication. we want to struggle so hard against calling it something we dont want, its now labeled 'difficult to describe'. which i find silly
It's not that difficult to describe. The media is described based on its content, format, and time of release.
If the core content is text-based, it's a blog. If it's audio-based, it's a podcast. If it's video-based, it's a either a vlog (for personal content) or simply video (for topical content). These all assume the content was first created, and then released.
If it's released at the time it's produced, it's a livestream, or just a stream.
I should have prefaced my situation better: I live in a country where the ISP censors certain websites and online services. The closest Linode is not on my continent (so the latency is noticeable). So my need to be connected to the Wireguard VPN really depends on what I’m doing. Having a split DNS system is seamless and I only activate the VPN manually as needed (both at home and when I’m out) Otherwise I would have just asked my ISP for a static IP, opened some ports and installed tailscale for everything else.
Upload speeds of the average person make general internet use while connected to a home VPN much worse. For example, my mobile nework is at least 10x faster than my home network upload speed if I am in a place with 5g. I’d much rather connect to my paid VPN provider where the speed difference is barely noticable.
Not to mention even if people are using a VPS, it might be very far away and severely impact speeds.
Take your time and don’t hang your hat on anything until you’ve run it for a while yourself before you subject your family to it, no matter how excited you are. You’ll just get people wary of trying your projects if it’s always failing, unless you have someone that knows how these things go and that you’re learning, and is willing to help you sort out bugs.
You probably don’t need anything. Laptops using disk have been in use in bumpier environments for decades prior to SSDs.
But let’s say you do. Bolt some eye hooks to the top of your case and suspend it with paracord. It’ll turn vibration into sway and your disks will happily keep on turning.
Yes. When loading small images - there is no noticeable difference between local and NAS. When loading videos or large pics - there is about a 2 sec lag, then the video plays normally. I have a 500/500 Mb internet at home and on the VPS side I think it’s a few Gbps. I am consistently pulling minimum 200 Mbps between the two. I set a mount option ,nofail so that my OS boots up when NAS is down/unreachable, and my container also starts up fine with the NAS down, but won’t play its content obviously
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