I mean if it’s homelab, it’s ok to be pets. Not everything has to be commoditized for the whims of industry.
I mean if it’s homelab, it’s ok to be pets. Not everything has to be commoditized for the whims of industry.
I don’t know if you’re into this, but this would be a perfect project to learn a new language or framework.
Do you mean RTSP
?
Camera: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B086L8TWM5?psc=1
Also use Motion with post-Motion capture alerts sent via XMPP. Got the family on XMPP so it works out.
Maybe it’s desktop environment dependent. Better to help yourself by: find / -iregex '.*jpg$' -o -iregex '.*jpeg$'
Irrelevant. You can sublicense MIT to GPL by forking if you’re so inclined.
I would vote for syncthing as it can have better support if you need syncing across work firewalls. Also allows device-to-device sync, not just server-device. It’s a cool federated solution (like lemmy!).
Good to know! I’m still at the vim+markdown+LaTeX for equations mode, but other than for math stuff I can’t be bothered for LaTeX. I wish collaborators would be open to LaTeX rather than Google Docs or the highway.
Surely the support for LaTeX is the killer feature with your math class, not emacs vs. vim.
I get that. But I think the quote refers to corporate infrastructure. In the case of a mail server, you would have automated backup servers that kick-in and you would simply pull the rack of the failed mail server.
Replacing drives based on SMART messages (pets) means you can do the replacement on your time and make sure you can do resilvering or whatever on your schedule. I think that is less burdensome than having a drive fail when you’re quite busy and being stressed about having the system is running in a degraded state until you have time to replace the drive.