My disaster recovery plan:
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I plan on not having a disaster.
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If I do have a disaster, I plan on trying to recover from it.
My disaster recovery plan:
I plan on not having a disaster.
If I do have a disaster, I plan on trying to recover from it.
My biggest problem has been that the ink always dries up, since I don’t print very often, and a laser printer has solved that for me. Now, about 3 years later, the black toner is still at 90%, and still working reliably.
Could we stop with the viruses for a while, please? Just a few years is all I ask.
I like how it basically generated the Ubisoft logo.
Nothing’s more permanent than a temporary solution.
Calckey sounds like a calculator/math/graphing application and Firefish sounds like another generic fork of Firefox.
And with multiple sticks of RAM in use, that makes it RAID, right?
Right?
Right now I’m using Synology Surveillance Station, but I’d like to replace it (or just supplement it) with Frigate.
I’ve succeeded in setting Frigate up with two cameras and person detection turned on (though no Coral accelerator, so it’s slow and ressource hungry), but now I can’t figure out how to get Home Assistant notifications once a person is detected while my “Home Mode” toggle is turned off in home Assistant.
I’m not good at actually making things happen in HA. I’ve managed to make lights turn on and off via MQTT (output from RTL_433 which listens to some wireless light switches I have), but that’s more or less it.
Correct, it’s completely different software.
They were for a few weeks, until today. I’m commenting from Kbin right now.
Turns out lemmy.ml admins had blocked a lot of bots and “kbinBot” (which is the useragent name used by Kbin for federation requests) was inadvertently among the blocked bots. The lemmy.ml admins took a long time to get it fixed, but it finally works again now.
but not every instance is necessarily running Lemmy right? Or are all the different sites like beehaw and kbin and such also running Llemmy?
Most instances are running Lemmy (the software). Kbin (the software) is an alternative to Lemmy (the software), though they can speak to one another, because they both use the ActivityPub protocol (same as Mastodon, PeerTube, Pixelfed, and so on). Kbin is much younger than Lemmy, but eventually more instances running Kbin will show up.
With the amount of data I have, it takes Everything about 12 hours to re-index it all.
I currently run Everything in a Linux VM (running with Wine) that has my servers’ shares mounted read-only, but it stops running after a day or two every time. All in all, not very stable.
I’m looking for something better too.
The floss picks are too taut to be able to do that adequately.
The cheap ones I use do go a bit slack, but maybe that’s just because the plastic is cheap and soft.
I can see you from kbin.social.
It’s a lot more plastic waste, but have you tried those fancy plastic sticks with dental floss on, I believe they are called “dental floss picks” in English? Makes it quite easy to floss, and they can be bought bulk pretty cheap, at least where I live.
I’m guessing it was the floppy drive?