Of course.
You don’t have to drop everything you’re doing to get the data off, it’s not like the drive has minutes to live. However, you must unplug it and stop using it until you have time to move everything off of it
Of course.
You don’t have to drop everything you’re doing to get the data off, it’s not like the drive has minutes to live. However, you must unplug it and stop using it until you have time to move everything off of it
That drive is failing. You need to get the data off of it right now. It should not be used again
It depends.
My personal servers are a mix of the two. I have a Synology NAS that I manage through a web-based GUI. Sometimes I’ll dip into command line via SSH, but not very often.
I have two more lower-power Linux servers that I manage through command-line primarily. They don’t have many system resources, so I want them to have as much available as possible to serve things.
Windows servers I use GUI management most of the time
Yeah. I agree with ya there, Red Hat screwed over Alma and Rocky with that decision. I can see the utility of those two distros for testing before committing to RHEL.
Plus, if Oracle has room to try to be the “good guys”, you’ve really screwed up
IBM will still sell you a brand new, updated mainframe in 2023.
They’re also in the open source software space (IBM owns Red Hat, a software company that has a lot of projects for Linux. Red Hat has their own Linux distro too)
I run Outline. Originally I was looking for a drop in Notion replacement, but it isn’t quite there yet.
I still run it because the stack was a bear to deploy, so I wanna get some use out of the product (Redis, Outline itself, Postgres, and MinIO or AWS). It is a good product, it’s just lacking some features that I use in Notion
When you get a chance to, I would run something like CrystalDiskInfo. That app shows you SMART data (think of SMART like vitals for a hard drive) from the drive. Make sure the drive health shows “Good” or “Okay”
Same. I installed Arch the manual way a few times, then tried archinstall. It’s dead easy
Have you looked into Voyager? It’s basically Apollo (with most of the core features of the original app). I use it as another Apollo refugee and I’m loving it
I run an MB8611 too. Solid little modem
My Synology is named Atlas because it’s my main file storage box (and has a most of my services running on it).
My VPS is called Aurora after the atmospheric phenomenon because cloud server.
And my little laptop I installed a server Linux distro on is called Challenger because I find it challenging to work with Fedora Server sometimes
This is the only correct answer
That’s so cool! Grafana is awesome, the whole team did a great job
+1 for Cloudflare. Use their service in my homelab
You worked on Grafana? Your product is awesome, I use it in my homelab for performance metrics
Installing Arch really is not what it’s made out to be anymore. Bootstrapping a system manually is like a half hour affair for me (maybe). It’s just fixing systemd-boot because inevitably I misconfigured it. And for people who don’t even wanna do that, archinstall.
Thanks for the update!
Maybe a centralized entry point run by someone else (or the Lemmy devs themselves)? It could explain concepts unique the fediverse and why picking the instance you make your account on is important. From then on, people don’t really need to worry about what instance they’re on (unless the instance they’re on goes on a defederating spree), which removes some of the complexity
It definitely looks like Trinity College