

Poseidon?
Poseidon?
It’s not innovative anymore, but it sure was when it released. But they kept it near its peak instead of making it utter horse crap.
I can’t disagree with this… After basing the size off of the vertical pixel count, we’re now going to switch to the horizontal count to describe the resolution.
I vaguely remember reading a news story about a firefighter that did that a while ago.
1gb symmetrical $70 a month…
My 4 host machines run debian (proxmox). I have a lot of different guest flavors running though, debian, fedora, rocky, one old guest still running Ubuntu and even a mint sandbox machine.
I probably have a bit more complicated self host than others because I am using it both for my useful internal services (jellyfin, git, pihole, etc.) I also run a whole lot of services for learning, such as kubernetes and dns. Plus a whole lot of other mostly useless stuff that I only use to test different architectures or automations that come in handy as an SRE.
Dotnet core 4 never existed because they wanted to make it the mainline dotnet… That means framework is retired and everything is now the slimmer multiplatform runtime.
I’d just go be a bard in a tavern. Drink, sing and play instruments.
I’ve migrated to prowlarr from jackett. It’s far faster in searches.
Hey you, you’re finally awake…
I use Arch, btw.
It’s more of an SLM.
as shocking as it is
That sounds like a good reason to not use the connector
I call it d-bag for short.
Micro services alone aren’t enough. You have to have proper observability and automation to be able to gracefully handle the loss of some functionality. Microservice architecture isn’t a silver bullet, but one piece of the puzzle to reliable highly available applications that can handle faults well