I bought an N100 mini PC (not POE) as my new server a couple months ago. I really like it. That processor is great for power efficiency.
people will shit on me about replacing Proxmox with LXD
From reading your comments I understand why. It’s in your delivery. You’re abrasive and you don’t explain why. You’re also telling people not to use something they know, to use something they don’t know, and not explaining how that would be beneficial. As far as I can see, you’ve only explained how LXD, when setup correctly, can do what Proxmox does.
You’re essentially telling people to use something that is at best a side grade for reasons, and being salty about it.
My x86 Proxmox consumes about 0.3 kwh a day at around 15% average load. I’ve only had the Kill A Watt on it for a day, so I don’t know how accurate that is, but it shouldn’t be too far off.
Not sure how they got so many votes.
Social media loves a good roasting.
To your point, I clicked on this post hoping to see what OP was going to use and why because I would like to build my own NAS some day. But like you said, this post is a waste of everyone’s time.
I’ve been wrong about the performance of algorithms on tiny data sets before. It’s always best to test your assumptions.
It’s satire. Chill.
Unironically I think that writing broad strokes of fiction is one of the best uses for LLMs. One of my first real personal tests for ChatGPT was having it create a test DnD campaign and it did a great job for the most part.
If I were running a campaign, I’d definitely use it as a helper.
Learning how to use other Docker images to run Docker containers is an important first step in that process.
I’m a programmer. My foray into learning how to containerize applications started by learning how to run containerized applications. Honestly, running them is the more complicated part (for many cases, some are dead simple).
Turning an app into an image is sometimes just a simple two line Dockerfile.
I started learning with Home Assistant and the branched out to pi hole, Frigate, Mosquito, and other home automation tools. I used that knowledge to containerize a home automation tool I wrote myself.
And now I’m working on containerizing dozens of applications at work.
Don’t gatekeep. No one likes it.
Defining the terms would be helpful. I don’t know what most of those terms mean.
The hardware isn’t super important if you can get a Google Coral TPU. You can run Frigate on a Raspberry Pi that way. Without the TPU, it can be fairly CPU intensive.
I run Frigate on an old laptop and before the TPU it would run really hot. After it runs much cooler.
Fuck you, Kim. Respectfully.