dnzm

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 16 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

I don't think "they should", but if you're willing / able to at least make a decent description of what it would entail, how it would work, and how it would benefit users, and possibly contribute in some other way, it might happen!

(It'll take more than a sentence and a half from the sidelines, I think)

 

Twee Wageningse wetenschappers ontvingen van de Amerikaanse Geologische dienst een lijst met 36 politieke vragen. Medewerkers van de universiteit zijn geadviseerd de vragenlijst niet in te vullen.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Does getting beaten into a comma, give you pause?

(Couldn't resist, sorry πŸ˜‰)

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Yep, the M is for mb, that's for RAM in this case.

As for levels... That's not really that black and white, IMO, there's no "best" platform, it's always "it depends". I think you're fine with a pi, certainly for a while, and especially at the price point. Plenty of folks running fedi instances and Matrix off of 'em.

The only thing that comes close and has good software support would be a second hand small form factor office PCs, like HP mini PCs or the Lenovo ThinkCentre. Might buy you some expandability down the road, but it's slightly bigger, uses a bit more energy, choices. It depends.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 month ago (4 children)

To start with the last question: yes, you can absolutely host more than one service on a single machine, resources permitting. The different services will each listen on a different (TCP) port, and you can front it all with a proxy which works a bit like a front desk, directing the incoming requests to the proper port, so foo.example.com gets directed to service A and bar.example.com gets directed to service B, and so on.

The key part is "resources permitting", because all those services need CPU cycles to run and memory to run in (not to mention storage). Especially RAM is critical; have too much running for the amount available, and your server has to "swap", parking bits of ram to disk, use it for whatever has to run at that moment, and swap bits back. Storage is always vastly slower than memory, so this slows things down tremendously, to the point of the server feeling sluggish or frozen. If you run on a Pi that runs off of a microSD card, not only is your storage really, really slow, you'll also severely limit its lifespan with swapping. So do invest in better storage, like a USB NVMe drive (not a regular USB thumb drive, as those are typically the same flash storage as sd cards). And see if you can get a pi with more RAM. There's no such thing as having "too much RAM".

So, what to run? I don't know about Hubzilla specifically, but their FAQ (under the "average hosting cost" header) says you should be fine β€” it's just a PHP + database app. But with apps like these, it also depends on the actual use: if your family and friends start following a million people, that's going to increase resource use. Keep in mind that over time, you'll see storage increase slowly but surely, anyway, I'm running a single user GoToSocial instance for myself, and the database and cached images and whatnot amount to some 12GB of storage. I did mention getting extra and faster storage, right? ;) I know there's folks hosting GoToSocial and snac on severely constrained hardware, like raspi zero (so far less powerful than what you have in mind), old routers and even their car radio...

WordPress is just another PHP + database app, although it tends to scale somewhat shitty; if you're not entirely tied to WordPress, you might look into different systems, maybe a static site generator that turns your pages into, well, static HTML files, which take next to no resources (CPU/RAM) to host.
Synapse is a bit of a heavy thing (although it has gotten vastly better, the last couple of years), but it too is quite disk-heavy, so really don't run this on SD cards.

Point is: yes, you can absolutely start with a Pi. I'd try and get one with as much RAM as you can / are willing to spend, as you can't upgrade it, and get some storage that's faster and less prone to failing. But even 2GB will get you some way and you'll learn a ton (aka "break stuff") in the process!

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago

Het is niet "het spelletje vuil spelen" als je de waarheid verkondigt, toch? πŸ˜‰

Ik ben het er wel mee eens, deels, er mag best wat vaker uitgelegd worden "dit is onzin of schadelijk, en wel hierom". Idealiter zou de pers dat doen, maar die is schijnbaar een beetje met vakantie, of zo.

Maar aan de andere kant wil je niet op alle onzin ingaan, want het is makkelijker om veel onzin te spuien dan om het goed te duiden, dat ga je niet winnen en leidt af van je eigen boodschap. Die moet ook nog steeds duidelijk gebracht worden.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (6 children)

Wow, some people will just not hear about living without their ISO enter, huh? πŸ˜‰

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

This is a Sweep with choc switches and Nice!Nano knock-offs for controllers.

Oh, you probably mean the magnetic thingies... Here you go!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago (3 children)
[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago

Because the Sweep is based on the Ferris, which was designed by someone who is a bit of a Rust but, apparently. For the Sweep, it was given a broom, of course.

 

cross-posted from: https://feddit.nl/post/28411785

cross-posted from: https://feddit.nl/post/28411770

34 Is close enough, right? Here's me hoping I'm not a day off. 😁

 

cross-posted from: https://feddit.nl/post/28411770

34 Is close enough, right? Here's me hoping I'm not a day off. 😁

 

34 Is close enough, right? Here's me hoping I'm not a day off. 😁

[–] [email protected] 235 points 2 months ago (22 children)

They can't even do a coup without fucking half of it up.

[–] [email protected] 24 points 2 months ago

Simple, the position doesn't require technical insight. At all. It should, but it doesn't.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

If I understand this document correctly, it would mean that the entire connection somehow gets routed through Meta's servers. I can fully understand the reluctance of other parties, including Signal, to do that, and I wonder how this is actually compliant with the DMA.

 

Thomas Baart (of splitkb.com fame) dives into group buys:

Group buys are still used as a business model, but its popularity is dwindling quickly. Why is that, and is that justified?

Interesting read!

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