Here is another one: https://storchennest-hoechstadt.de/live-cam
486
What a heap of crap.
It's a very low weight as far as I am concerned. I always end up with much higher weight. :-)
Thanks for the comprehensive gear review! 13 kg for the gear is quite impressive.
72 hours isn't a lot. Many countries strongly suggest having emergency supplies for at least 10 to 14 days.
Their construction is solid. Easy to work on. I didn't have cooling problems with any of the tiny models. You may run into issues if you put a 65 W TDP CPU in a tiny model. They are built for the low power 35 W TDP CPUs.
The at load efficency isn't always the most important metric, depending on what you are using the machines for. If they are mostly idle, efficiency isn't too bad. Many server tasks don't load the CPU to the fullest anyway.
They are not too terrible really. 3rd gen i7 is the Ivy Bridge generation, so 22 nm. For many homelab server tasks the CPUs would be just fine. Power efficiency is of course worse than modern CPUs, but way better than the previous 32 nm Sandybridge generation. I had such a system with integrated graphics and one SSD and that drew 15 W at idle at the wall.
Pi Zero uses the CPU from the 3
No, the original Pi Zero uses the CPU of the Pi1 (only clocked higher). So it is quite a bit slower than a Pi 2, since it has only a single ARMv6 CPU core. Still fine for a DNS server on a typical home network.
It won’t get wikis or issues though.
You can easily mirror Github wikis as well. You just need to add .wiki.git
to the repo URL. That way you can clone the wiki just like any other Git repo.
This is pretty neat. If this was a real museum, you'd have to do a lot of walking, that's for sure!
Yeah, I noticed this as well. It is quite annoying.