nfreak

joined 3 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 17 minutes ago

Doesn't hurt. It's very easy to route it through a gluetun container if you're selfhosting.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 22 minutes ago* (last edited 16 minutes ago)

The industry is pretty fucked right now to be brutally honest. I was let go a few years ago after nearly a decade along with another member of our team. Took a full year and easily 1000+ applications for me to find something new, and even longer for my former team member.

Didn't get back into SWE either. I work in software support now, making literally half of what I used to make, and I believe my friend is in a sort of sysadmin role.

The best thing I could say is expand your options. Between RTO mandates, huge pushes for genAI bullshit, and just complete oversaturation of the market, SWE is a hellhole right now. The job market as a whole is a disaster right now, but tech is on another level. Expand your options to different roles and tune your resume to get past the automated bullshit systems and read by real people. I hate to be pessimistic but frankly I would not expect to get into another SWE role with how things are right now. Software support is a strong adjacent field but don't expect anywhere near the same salary.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 hours ago

Yeah I feel like v15 released a bit too early outside of preview builds. It's a substantial improvement but doesn't feel quite ready.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 hours ago

It's mostly the lemmy.world subs that just feel like reddit 2.0 tbh

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 9 minutes ago) (2 children)

I've done exactly this with wg-easy so I can use my external VPN on my phone while still connecting to my home network without toggling VPNs.

My config here is for v14, you'll want to pin the image version: https://github.com/qdm12/gluetun/discussions/1192#discussioncomment-12973135 Note there's a small typo in the local network Down rule I added, I'm on mobile right now else I'd copy my current config instead that cleans it up a bit since this post.

In the same thread, someone posted a fantastic guide to get it working with v15. You'll need to add an iptables rule for full LAN access if you want to enable that: https://blog.bktus.com/en/archives/2918/

V15 was giving me issues because it didn't allow you to disable ipv6, but apparently the latest edge builds do. I haven't tried that yet

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

I wouldn't day D4 is a good game but I thoroughly enjoyed my time with it. I stopped playing right after VoH came out, and the direction that expansion was taking the game didn't interest me, but it was a fun time overall. Not a very deep game though and endgame was basically non-existent since everything falls over at that point.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

Honestly the collectathon genre as a whole doesn't hold up much these days. A few modern games pull it off here and there, but going back and trying to play any of the classic Rare titles feels like a slog.

Loved all those games as a kid, and they did a ton to shape the industry, but they don't really hold up.

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

I started with Shadowkeep and I got sucked in hard for 5 years. The first year or two I heard these sorts of negative comments here and there, mostly from long-term players, but didn't think much of it.

Fast forward to this past year, and Revenant is what made me say fuck it and drop the game entirely. I was already sick of the state of the game, powercreep to hell and back, pvp in the dumpster, nonexistent loot, etc etc. But jesus that season was eye-opening. I uninstalled a day after Tomb of Elders launched.

I was also a major completionist - near max triumph score, never missed a day 1 raid from DSC onwards til unfortunate scheduling fucked our SE run, every GM soloed to that point, shit like that. Missing that one single season and a couple shitty little time-limited events was enough to feel like I'd fallen behind, and that was it. Booted up the game once since to check out Heresy, activity was the same shit as always, loot was dogshit, so I checked out right away.

And that's just the gameplay gripes. Bungie as a studio is toxic as fuck in so many ways and I can never in good conscience support them again.

It took a few years but I finally understand what people were telling me way back when I started.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 day ago

Even TF2 gave special cosmetics and stuff to existing players when it went F2P ages ago. It's a standard practice at this point. I sunk 12k hours into D2 until I quit it for good this past fall, and looking back I swear I just notice more and more red flags like this that I hadn't thought too much about.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago

Part of the reason I just shifted to a fully self-hosted setup.

Left Spotify because of all the bullshit they pull, tried out Tidal because of the higher quality and higher artist pay, but even if it is a substantially better platform, its ownership is questionable to say the least.

I dusted off bandcamp and learned to use slskd to build a full local high quality library powered by a Navidrome instance.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I know the mobile browser space is just weird overall, especially Firefox forks, but it definitely stood out to me. Things that work totally fine in Librewolf out-of-the-box were totally busted, and most settings are inaccessible.

I'm still keeping an eye on it though, as Fennec leaves a lot to be desired, and using a chromium-based browser like Vanadium won't do it for me because I rely so much on the cross-platform sync functions.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago (4 children)

I've tried it a few times but tend to fall back to Fennec. While Librewolf on desktop is restrictive by design, it also still allows you tweak the settings to your liking (with some scolding). Ironfox felt much more locked down to me, and if a site was completely broken, I couldn't do anything about it in the settings.

 

Started my first home server about 3 weeks ago and I really need to reconsider my storage options, but everything I read about NAS setups is going right over my head. This is gonna be a novel partially because writing this down helps me think through it, and I also just want to be sure I'm on the right track.

Here's my current setup and what I'm looking to do:

  • My server itself is a little HP mini PC. i7, 2 TB SSD, solid little machine so far. Running Proxmox with a single debian VM which houses all my docker containers - I know I'm not using proxmox to its full advantage, but whatever it works for me. I mostly just use it for its backup system.

  • Currently using an 8 TB powered usb external, primarily for media and backup files. Everything else fits directly on the server's internal SSD with plenty of space available, but being able to expand or migrate nextcloud and immich down the road would be nice

  • Coincidentally, I've been using a similar 8 TB external for my desktop for the past 3-4 years. Right now it's just for desktop backups (cachyOS) and storing about 500GB worth of ROMs and growing. I used to use this to expand my steam library, but over the years internal storage has gotten much cheaper so I really don't need to do that any more.

  • I've been reading about external drive shucking, since apparently that's a thing? Seems like my best bet here would be to crack both of these external drives open and slap them into a NAS. 16TB would be plenty for my use.

  • Hardware: while I like the form factor of Synology/Terramaster/etc, seems like the better choice would be to just slap together my own mini-ITX build and throw TrueNAS on it. Easy enough, but what sort of specs should I look for? Since I already have 2 drives to slap in, I'd be looking to spend no more than $200. Alternatively, if I did want the convenience and form factor of a "traditional" NAS, is that reasonable within the budget? From what I've seen it's mostly older models in that price range.

  • I assume I can essentially just mount the NAS like an external drive on both the server and my desktop, is that how it works? For example, Jellyfin on my server is pointed to /mnt/external, could I just mount a NAS to that same directory instead of the USB drive and not have to change a thing on the configuration side?

  • Will adding a NAS into the mix introduce any buffering/latency issues with Jellyfin and Navidrome?

  • What about emulation? I'm going to set up RomM pretty soon along with the web interface for older games, easy enough. But is streaming roms over a NAS even an option I should consider for anything past the Gamecube era?

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