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[-] oranki@sopuli.xyz 8 points 1 year ago

This is true, with a couple gigs of RAM and SATA storage Nextcloud is not at all bad. Assuming an instance with not that much simultaneous users.

It feels like slow sometimes, then after an hour with M365 at work it doesn't feel slow at all.

[-] oranki@sopuli.xyz 4 points 1 year ago

Even though you said "isn't Nextcloud", I'd still say it's perhaps the simplest solution.

You can disable most the other apps and set calendar as the landing page. If you don't use the other features, the resource usage is very low, just a cron job that does basically nothing. I don't think disabling the default apps has much effect on the footprint, by the way.

Calendar, contacts and notes are why I still self host nextcloud. Just remember to pay/donate to Davx5, they're one of the projects that need to keep running!

[-] oranki@sopuli.xyz 5 points 1 year ago

In Finland synchronization in gearboxes is starting to become a thing nowadays. Double clutching for 20 years now (38).

Just kidding, got my first automatic two years ago, so yes.

[-] oranki@sopuli.xyz 5 points 1 year ago

There's a base image of ublue, which is Silverblue without a DE. I'd suppose you can mostly just layer e.g. Sway or i3 on top.

Traditional package model will still have it's usage, of course, I agree. But if Silverblue works for a developer like me, I'd say a for more "regular" users immutable distros seem like a very viable option.

[-] oranki@sopuli.xyz 12 points 1 year ago

I recently put the nvidia variant of ublue-os on my work laptop, which has Optimus graphics. Couldn't be happier.

It's great to see these variants popping up! I really think ostree may be the future for desktop Linux, and not even very far away.

[-] oranki@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 year ago
[-] oranki@sopuli.xyz 37 points 1 year ago

I started using gestures, and haven't been able to transition away since.

Both have their pros and cons.

[-] oranki@sopuli.xyz 4 points 1 year ago

Rsyslog to collect logs to a single server, then lnav for viewing them on that server is a good combo. Oldschool but very effective for self-host scale.

Glad the tip was useful!

[-] oranki@sopuli.xyz 12 points 1 year ago

For a bit enhanced log file viewing, you could use something like lnav, I think it's packaged for most distributions.

Cockpit can be useful for journald, but personally I think GUI stuff is a bit clunky for logs.

Grep, awk and sed are powerful tools, even with only basic knowledge of them. Vim in readonly mode is actually quite effective for single files too.

For aggregating multiple servers' logs good ol' rsyslog is good, but not simple to set up. There are tutorials online.

[-] oranki@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Oh the times when getting GTA from a friend required 30+ 3½" floppy disks IIRC. That plus making 5 or 6 round trips to friend's house, because one of them almost always got corrupted during the zip process.

And since no one had the disk space or knowhow to store the zip packets on HDD for the inevitable re-copying, had to redo the whole pack from scratch each time.

Edit: disk->HDD

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oranki

joined 1 year ago