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Cake day: July 3rd, 2023

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  • I have tried a couple of Proxmox clusters, one with overkill specs and one with little Mini PCs. Proxmox does eat up a fair amount of memory, but I have used it with Ceph for live migrations. Its really useful to me to be able to power off a machine, work on it, then bring it back up, and have no interruptions in my services. That said, my Mini PCs always seemed to be hurting for RAM. So that’s my pros and cons.








  • There’s a series of Lemmy posts called the Linux upskill challenge that goes step by step through setting up and using Linux. I tried self hosting and jumping straight in too, and it sucked.

    What worked for me:

    1. Start using open source versions of stuff, like switching from Chrome to Firefox, Office to Libre Office.
    2. Set up Virtual Box, and practice running server apps on Linux on virtual machines, until you’ve done a few Linux VMs and gotten used to the interfaces and commands.
    3. Dual boot a laptop or desktop, one by one getting your daily use apps working in Linux.
    4. Distro hop a bit. I never thought I’d land on Fedora, but here I am.
    5. Get used to running and configuring servers from the command line.
    6. Host some stuff with VMs and get used to the networking and bridging and stuff.
    7. Containers!

    I’m still in the middle of 6+7. Not super comfy with Docker quite yet, but getting there. I really do love having my stuff self-hosted though. Well worth the effort.


  • Thanks to this post, I’m going to adopt the title of Butlerian!

    I worked in telecom for years, and recently left because my company decided to automate out a bunch of positions by using their shiny new AI. It suggested carrying 300 Amps at 50 volts (DC) several hundred feet with 14 gauge cable. (Electricians, go ahead and laugh.)

    I went back to school, learning IT support. Most of my classmates are fresh out of high school, and they’re all using Chat GPT like my generation uses Google. But instead of googling the answer and then figuring out how to make it work and testing the results, they just stop.

    Chat GPT says to use this config? They use it. Of course it doesn’t work.

    Over and over, I have classmates asking me why their Copliot generated code isn’t giving them the right answer, or why their server process is failing to start.

    I fear for the safety of a world where the tech support is provided by people who never learned how the tech runs, never learned to read, test, experiment, fail, and try again…

    So yeah, Butlerian. points at my face






  • I disagree with this. Law school isn’t cheap. Law school doesn’t come from nothing. I’m seeing kids in my class who are stacked six to a bed, working full work weeks and trying to squeak by in class, and largely failing. Also, effective politicians need to raise funds to run campaigns. Funds come from rich people. Even if this effective politician somehow manages to afford an expensive law degree, they also need to have the time and opportunity to succeed in school, and then somehow manage the free time to also make connections among the wealthy so they can raise the funds to run a campaign.

    Politics has become for the rich, by the rich.






  • So, I own a Jelly 2.

    I wish I could recommend it. Really, I do. I can’t though. The Jelly 2 dropped wifi all the time! I ate more data on that thing sitting in my house, ten feet from my router, merrily chewing away my LTE… Also, it dropped Bluetooth. My earbuds would stutter. And… It dropped calls.

    I wish, I wish it would have worked, but it just didn’t.

    The screen was a bit too small to be useful.

    Ironically, another Japanese import phone is a whole different story. My Mode One Retro II? Fantastic! My prof calls me “flip phone”. The number pad is totally useless, but it fixes every issue I had with the Jelly, and it fits comfortably in my jeans’ pocket.

    I hope your Jelly Star works, I really do. I hate the Jelly 2 though.