BartyDeCanter

joined 1 week ago
[–] BartyDeCanter@piefed.social 2 points 9 hours ago

Looking back… none of them. I had an OG Gameboy, GBA, PS2, Wii, 3DS, and now a Switch 2. My favorite was probably either the first Gameboy or the 3DS. I loved all of the weird streetpass stuff when I was traveling for work. But I have great memories of all of them, and the S2 has been a lot of fun with my kids.

Same here. I have been moving everything I can to self hosted FOSS, contributing to FOSS projects, and rehabbing old hardware. It’s been fun, I’ve met people from around the world and I’m getting tools I like to be even better.

Locally, I’m working with the library to start Linux days, where we help fix old computers and move them to Linux. There’s been a lot of interest due to Win11.

[–] BartyDeCanter@piefed.social 9 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Oh yeah. I’ve had to do a small amount of it on much simpler systems for work from time to time, and it’s always been damn hard. Often rewarding in a weird way, but very difficult.

[–] BartyDeCanter@piefed.social 2 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

I had a problem on my work laptop with them about five years ago, but rolling back fixed it. Never on my personal machines.

Edit: TBF, I’ve never had a personal laptop with an nVidia card. I generally prefer to build my own desktops, though I do have a laptop. It has an AMD GPU, also with no problems.

[–] BartyDeCanter@piefed.social 18 points 5 days ago (2 children)

What do you think Project Support is?

[–] BartyDeCanter@piefed.social 8 points 6 days ago

My partner bought a Skylight screen a month ago. I put it up, but it’s basically been unused since.

For me, there was this very early health tracking watch I got, which was so fragile that it would reset and lose all data if I did anything more active than walking.

Some Google TV that was well reviewed, but at some point shortly after I got it had a software update that made the UI unusablly slow. Like, 5-10 seconds to respond to every button click.

[–] BartyDeCanter@piefed.social 53 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (5 children)

Eh, that looks like typical take home for a staff level engineer in a big city.

Edit: Assuming they get paid every two weeks, that’s an annual take home of $161,122. Depending on state taxes, insurance coverage, 401k contributions, dependents, etc, that’s a base salary of $200-250k. Which, yeah, that’s what I budget for a staff salary.

[–] BartyDeCanter@piefed.social 4 points 1 week ago

I recently did a big expansion on my home networking infrastructure, and backups were one of bigger triggers.

My setup is based on a local NAS + Hetzner storage box. The NAS runs Immich, Paperless, and the arr stack. Immich and Paperless back up to the storage box via borg, along with the configuration and docker files, but not the media. I either have physical copies of that or don’t really care because I can just download it again.

My computers also back up to the storage box via borg, except for the Photos, Music and Video directories, for the same reasons. My partners Mac is currently backing up to an external USB drive, but the plan is to move them to Backblaze for the easy SAF and/or the NAS as a Timemachine target.

[–] BartyDeCanter@piefed.social 1 points 1 week ago

Plausible? Absolutely. The questions are what and why?

For notes, it seems like most people have settled on one of three things: org-mode, markdown, or free form plain text. There are some closed source tools that use a proprietary format, but fuck them.

So then the question becomes what does the backend do? Provide a way to query notes for links, topics, and todos? Keep a versioning system? Synchonization? Something else? Answer those questions and you have a project.

For references, take a look at nb, Joplin, Logseq, org-mode, anytype.

[–] BartyDeCanter@piefed.social 11 points 1 week ago (1 children)

There are dozens of us!

[–] BartyDeCanter@piefed.social 11 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Helix when I can install things, vi when I can't.

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