Pipewire fixed some Bluetooth issues for me.
Pipewire fixed some Bluetooth issues for me.
It’s not automated. I just have the most important commands to fix/rebuild my sever in case of disasater.
I don’t save all my documents. Just my self-hosting, servers infraestructure notes. I don’t want to have the recovery intructions in the same machine I’m recovering
The only thing I save in Google Drive are my notes just in case of disaster.
You are rigth about HEIF, but most electronic devices already pay for the license to encode/decode HEVC.
The camera sensor returns raw images, then there is post-processong and the last step is encoding. There are no technical limitations and it’s not hard to implement another image format. As other users commented, Google Pixel phones and some apps in Google Play already does. Btw I’m electronic + software engineer.
My conclusion is even if the new formats are better, JPEG is more compatible and good enough for most users. Some brands take care of power users and others don’t. I’m a bit disappointed with OnePlus camera software.
All 3 formats I mentioned are free to use and there are free and open source libraries to do the conversion.
But they could give you an option to change it. For example, in my OnePlus I can choose video in h264 or h265 format. Photo there is no option, just JPEG.
I use just 1 Traefik instace to manage all my subdomains, certificates, RPs, IP filter, rate limiter…
HTTPS and VPN (Wireguard) ports
I recommend you all to switch to Pipewire. Most bluethooth problems are fixed.
I read that too but I had 2 external cases (fatenc and yottamaster) for more than 7 years and 0 problems.
Custom build. Intel Nuc i5 + USB 3.0 external Raid 5 case with 3 HDD + Router/Switch. The Intel nuc is really power efficient ~10w. It’s comparable with RPi 4 ~5w but 3 or 4 times more performance with hardware video decoding.
I understand. There are Anker power banks for laptops with 65w. They should be more efficient but I don’t have data about the long term use. I guess the battery will last less than the UPS batteries.
I will have a power load of 35W 24/7 for years. I’m using the unloaded power consumption as a proxy to measure the UPS consumption/efficiency. In my case a total power consumption (UPS + 35W load) of 40W will be acceptable, 55W won’t.
The output is DC 9V/3A - 12V/3A - 15V/2,4A - 19V/1,89A. I will need extra adapters for other voltages like 5V.
Thank you for the link but I can’t see the unloaded power consumption in the specifications.
I read about different UPS topologies and the model you suggested is “standby”, the most power efficient => https://unifiedpowerusa.com/ups-topology-optimal-environment/
But some users report the “Cyberpower ValueUPS 600” (similar model) consumes - idle with nothing connected - 20W exactly
TT-RSS (Tiny Tiny RSS). It’s the most complete for selfhosting.
TT-RSS (Tiny Tiny RSS). It’s the most complete for selfhosting.
3 2 1 with Restic and B2
Nice read. I did similar hacks in the past but I have less time lately.