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Confusing title. I assumed that there was a man at the gym blow drying Benedict Cumberbatch’s balls while Benedict read a random letter to him.
Confusing title. I assumed that there was a man at the gym blow drying Benedict Cumberbatch’s balls while Benedict read a random letter to him.
It got enshittified. I went to use it one day and it wouldn’t work without creating an account.
Same - As an Insomnia refugee, I thought “Oh no, not this again” and felt foolish for evangelising it.
I like data, I like tech, I like investing large amounts of time and energy to self-host things that muggles would not bother with.
I mean, yes, I could. But I’m committed to the #selfhosted life where I spend hours building unnecessarily complicated systems to make my life easier in small ways.
I’m starting to think my commitment to the Apple ecosystem and my desire for self-hosting are at odds.
The process for this is to obtain an EPS32 with bluetooth and wifi, pair it to the scale with bluetooth then keep it powered on in range of the scale, then the data goes into HA?
I have the opposite experience of this. All of my local services are a single docker container inside an LXC. I don’t like that it’s conceptually messy, but in practice it’s easy to manage. What I love about it is the simplicity of backing up or moving the entire LXC between servers.
I’ve not had any drama with things breaking across Proxmox updates. The only non-gui thing I need to do during the process is adding two lines to the LXC conf to have Tailscale work correctly.
It’s mind-bogglingly convenient, especially compared to the before times. Consider donating to them if you can.
No one’s mentioned Forgejo yet? Solid git and artifact repository.
There’s lots of ways to skin this particular cat. My current approach is low powered Synology (j series?) for mass storage, then 1 litre PC’s running proxmox for my compute power using their NVME for storage, all backed up to the Synology.
Two good points here OP. Type docker image ls
to see all the images you currently have locally - you’ll possibly be surprised how many. All the ones tagged <none>
are old versions.
If you’re already using github, it includes an package repository you could push retagged images to, or for more self-hosty, a local instance of Forgejo would be a good option.
Build anything small into a container on your laptop, push it to DockerHub or the Github package registry then host it on fly.io for free.
Great write up, thanks. For video learners, Wolfgang does a good step-by-step on YouTube
I’d love you to check back later with your conclusions.
Guide to Self Hosting LLMs with Ollama.
ollama run llama3.2
If it’s an M1, you def can and it will work great. With Ollama.
+1 for Forgejo. I started on Gogs, then gathered that there had been some drama with that and Gitea. Forgejo is FOSS, simple to get going, and comfortable to use if you’re coming from GitHub. It’s actively maintained, and communication with the project is great.
Great question (and we are reaching the outside edge of my knowledge here). Something like 3-5% of carbon in plants is taken up from the soil by plant roots. I don’t fully understand the mechanism, but the organic carbon percentage is an important competent in the calculation of how much artificial nitrogen a crop is going to need, so I guess it’s probably some biochemical process for making the nitrogen available.
The organic carbon percentage is closely watched by farmers and is something of an indication of soil health. ie if your crop rotation is reducing the OC% over time then you probably need to reconsider it. It’s one of the reasons burning crop stubbles is a much rarer practice now.
I started doing this, maybe 15 years ago, but if I look through my spam folder now, most of it is to the email address I used before I began using unique addresses (the rest is to random addresses in my domains that I’ve never used).
My hypotheses from that are that