Welcome to Incremental Social! Learn more about this project here!
Check out lemmyverse to find more communities to join from here!

Selfhosted

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

DarkDarkHouse , in ‘My whole library is wiped out’: what it means to own movies and TV in the age of streaming services
@DarkDarkHouse@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Piracy is only illegal because we made it so. We can change that.

gedaliyah ,
@gedaliyah@lemmy.world avatar

How do you change that without completely stripping property rights away from artists though? Not just corporate IP, but all artists?

WamGams ,

Piracy doesn't take money from artists, just ask Cory Doctorow, a person making their living as a writer while uploading the torrents of his novels himself.

Corporate consolidation is what kills the artists. The studios make less movies per year, so the a list actors go to television and take the roles Rob Morrow used to get.

gedaliyah ,
@gedaliyah@lemmy.world avatar

Is it fine for a billion dollar company to ripoff smaller artists? It's a form of piracy, so this would be allowed, too.

grue ,

That's the neat part: you don't have to, because copyright was never a property right to begin with.

First, not only are ideas not property, they're pretty much exactly the opposite of it. I'll let Thomas Jefferson himself explain this one:

It has been pretended by some (and in England especially) that inventors have a natural and exclusive right to their inventions; & not merely for their own lives, but inheritable to their heirs. but while it is a moot question whether the origin of any kind of property is derived from nature at all, it would be singular to admit a natural, and even an hereditary right to inventions. it is agreed by those who have seriously considered the subject, that no individual has, of natural right, a separate property in an acre of land, for instance. by an universal law indeed, whatever, whether fixed or moveable, belongs to all men equally and in common, is the property, for the moment, of him who occupies it; but when he relinquishes the occupation the property goes with it. stable ownership is the gift of social law, and is given late in the progress of society. it would be curious then if an idea, the fugitive fermentation of an individual brain, could, of natural right, be claimed in exclusive and stable property. if nature has made any one thing less susceptible, than all others, of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an Idea; which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the reciever cannot dispossess himself of it. it’s peculiar character too is that no one possesses the less, because every other possesses the whole of it. he who recieves an idea from me, recieves instruction himself, without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, recieves light without darkening me.

Second, a copyright isn't a right, either; it's a privilege. Consider the Copyright Clause: it is one of the enumerated powers of Congress, giving Congress the authority to issue temporary monopolies to creators, for the sole and express purpose "to promote the progress of science and the useful arts." Note that that's a power, not an obligation, and the purpose is not "because the creator is entitled to it" or anything similar to that.

Besides, think of it this way: if copyright were actually a property right, the fact that it expires would be unconstitutional under the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. But it does expire, so it clearly isn't a property right.

lowleveldata ,

I think what we should do is to have better non-piracy ways of owning things instead of "making piracy legal" (what does that even mean?)

ElderWendigo ,
@ElderWendigo@sh.itjust.works avatar

I think the more nuanced take is that we should be making "piracy" legal by expanding and protecting fair use and rights to make personal copies. There are lots of things that are called piracy now that really shouldn't be. Making "piracy" legal still leaves plenty of room for artists to get paid.

Katana314 ,

Most people would be fine with this in the case of a home user duplicating one or two copies for his kids to watch and as backups. But we have seen whenever a rule permits something, someone will work out the MAXIMUM way in which they can abuse it for profit. Give them an inch, and they take a mile.

Ideally, we could have laws that are really finely built to be specific to that first scenario. But I honestly don't know how you write those.

Zachariah ,
@Zachariah@lemmy.world avatar
localme ,

Thanks for sharing! I wish they had the date of publishing listed for this article. I get the feeling it was written 15 years ago, well before streaming music services existed. Would love to see them update this based on the latest technologies and services.

nekusoul ,
@nekusoul@lemmy.nekusoul.de avatar

Looking into the metadata of the included PDF version reveals that it's from 2004, so even a bit older than that.

localme ,

Wow good find using the pdf metadata!

Zachariah ,
@Zachariah@lemmy.world avatar

The EFF’s concept was from the Napster days, but I think this was written later on.

KISSmyOSFeddit ,

I want to see a world where content creators are simply paid by the hour, while they work. Why do they get to still make money off their work 70 years after they died?

Yes, it would probably mean that billion-dollar-movies aren't viable anymore, and most YouTubers couldn't live off their videos, but I see that as a good thing.

Railcar8095 ,

want to see a world where content creators are simply paid by the hour, while they work.

Do you? Because that's how game developers get their ideas crushed in favor of yet another game as a service that nobody asked for but makes stock holders happy.

And for alternative creators, who would pay? Do they need to be churning content as a job and not because they are inspired?

I get the idea, it's just that seems hard to pull off

jabjoe ,
@jabjoe@feddit.uk avatar

Also depends on the country. It isn't everywhere. Non-commercial file-sharing is legal in a number of European countries and I'm sure elsewhere.

It could be taken as a sign of the health of the democracy's function and technically literacy of the population. In a society of tech heads with a highly functional democracy, it would be DRM measures that would be illegal.....

TheButtonJustSpins , in Why You Should Self-Host Everything

If you're not paying for a service, you're likely being monetized by watching ads or providing personal data to companies that don't necessarily have your best interests at heart.

This is a bit out of date. Nowadays, you pay for the service and are monetized by watching ads and providing personal data to companies that definitely don't have your best interests at heart.

1984 ,
@1984@lemmy.today avatar

People said it back then too. The ad and tracking industry will always invade more and more of our privacy. When will there be enough tracking to make them stop and be happy? Never. Never is the only answer.

ChilledPeppers ,

Username checks out .

Unchanged3656 , in Sounds like Haier is opening the door!

Well, how about having a local API and have no calls at all to your cloud infrastructure? Probably too easy and you cannot lock people into your ecosystem.

helenslunch ,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

From any practical standpoint, this makes so much sense.

Sometimes my Tesla fails to unlock for some reason and I have to disable my VPN and then stand next to it like a God damn idiot for 10 seconds while it calls it's servers in fucking California to ask it to unlock my car.

dual_sport_dork ,
@dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world avatar

As if I needed yet another reason to never ever own a Tesla.

My car has this crazy technology in it: You can stick the key in the door and twist and it'll unlock. Even if the network is down or the battery is dead. Arcane, right?

Alto ,

Anyone buying a Tesla at this point either knows they're buying a shit car purely for the status symbol, or they're a rube. Fools and their money and all that

helenslunch ,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

Well that's incredibly presumptive, judgemental and simply untrue. They're incredibly pragmatic and well-rounded. And relatively inexpensive to boot.

Alto ,

My friends base model kia soul from 2013 has less issues with gaps in the body and awful craftsmanship with regards to interior trim than the two model 3s that are in my family. The same has been true for quite literally every car I've ever owned, and I've owned real pieces of shit. It's also been in the shop less despite having been around an extra 7 years.

helenslunch ,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

Don't know what to tell you. I have zero issues with panel gaps. Nor has anyone that I know who actually owns one.

The only service I have needed in 3 years they came and completed in my driveway while I watched TV. Can't say that about any other cars I've owned.

BearOfaTime ,

You don't.

That others do is the issue.

helenslunch ,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

They don't 🤷

BearOfaTime ,

Hahahahahahajaja

Found the rube

helenslunch ,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

Very mature.

AbidanYre ,

Are they even a status symbol at this point? At least where I'm at they're a dime a dozen.

gravitas_deficiency ,

I will be driving my 03 1.8t 5mt Jetta into the ground, thank you very much.

SoleInvictus ,
@SoleInvictus@lemmy.world avatar

Hell yes! My sister-in-law has your same year but the diesel version and that thing is a champ. It's rated at 45 mpg on the highway but she typically gets 50+, even with nearly 200k miles on it.

I had a 2004 1.8t Jetta for 12 years but I swapped it for a Prius. I love the Prius features and fuel economy but I miss how damn quick that my Jetta was, plus I loved the interior color scheme.

helenslunch ,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

Haha yeah there are other, more reliable methods but the "phone as a key" is also super convenient when it works properly, which is most of the time. It just would be a lot smarter if it worked locally.

dual_sport_dork ,
@dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world avatar

...Or if there were an alternative option that didn't rely on software and electronics is my point.

Cars have had electronic remote keyless entry for decades. It's not new. Some of them even have phone apps that duplicate that functionality. No one but Tesla has been stupid enough to remove the keyhole, though.

helenslunch , (edited )
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

I understood your point. My point is those electronics make it more convenient to use. Would I appreciate ALSO having a physical unlock mechanism? Sure. It also increases the attack surface.

Cars have had electronic remote keyless entry for decades.

As does Tesla.

Bazoogle ,

I think it could definitely be possible to do locally, and I wouldn't want a car where I have to connect to servers to connect to it. But I am also not sure I want a car that can be opened with a command on the car itself. The code to access your CAR being stored locally on the car itself, with no server side validation, does seem kinda scary. It's one thing for someone to manage to get into your online login where you can change the password, it's another for someone to literally be able to steal your car because they found a vulnerability. It being stored locally would mean people would reverse engineer it, they could potentially install a virus on your car to be able to gain access. Honestly, as a tech guy, I don't trust computers enough to have it control my car.

helenslunch ,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

It already unlocks locally over Bluetooth.

morph3ous ,

The issue you are experiencing likely has nothing to do with the VPN. Network connectivity is not needed to unlock the car. I have been in places with no cell phone signal and it still works.

I do sometimes experience the same issue you are. If I wake up my phone, then it works. So it may be working for you not because you disabled the VPN, but because you woke up your phone and it then sent out the bluetooth signal to let the car know you were nearby.

helenslunch ,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

When I have the VPN on I get nothing but a "Session Expired" notice for several months at a time.

psivchaz ,

It's a bit of both! Certain commands to the car can be done locally via Bluetooth OR via Tesla servers. The tricky bit is that status always comes from the server. If you are on a VPN that is blocked (like I use NordVPN and it is often blocked) then the app can't get status and as long as it can't get status it may not even try a local command. It's unclear to me under what circumstances it does local vs cloud commands, and it may have to do with a Bluetooth LE connection that you can't really control.

When you don't have service, or you're on VPN, it may be worthwhile to try disabling and reenabling Bluetooth. I have had success with this before. If you're using android, it seems like the widget also uses Bluetooth, so you could try adding the widget to your home screen and using that. You can also try setting the Tesla app to not be power controlled, so it never gets closed.

Either way, there's a definite engineering problem here that feels like it should be fixed by Tesla. But I can at least confirm that, even in situations with zero connectivity, you should be able to perform basic commands like unlock and open trunk without data service.

Rentlar ,

Someone tell Gianpiero! You could save up to 20% on Amazon fees in just 5 minutes. Commit to a Local API today!

Unchanged3656 ,

Probably more. Your app can use the local API then as well. And AWS is insanely expensive, especially if you forget to block log ingestion to Cloudwatch (ask me how I know).

jkrtn ,

I'm cynical so I assume they are turning a profit selling user data. So the lost money is not from AWS expenses but from not having installed apps to steal more data.

jkrtn ,

I'm glad the people with this device are getting traction on using it with their HA, but holy hell this is a complete non-starter for me and I cannot understand why they got it in the first place. There's no climate automation I would ever want that is worth a spying device connected to the internet and a spying app installed on my phone.

ikidd ,
@ikidd@lemmy.world avatar

Extend this to robot vacuums. I have no clue in hell why anyone would want their vacuum connecting to a cloud service that won't be there in 2 years.

Auli ,

Yep people should only purchase things that don't require the cloud. Local control is the best.

mannycalavera , in Here is what 6 decommissioned servers looks like. My Jellyfin will be very happy
@mannycalavera@feddit.uk avatar
Krafting OP ,
@Krafting@lemmy.world avatar

I've been jealous of people, same as you, now it's my turn to shine! Your turn will come!

ShepherdPie ,

Me too. I thought these would be a bunch of 1TB HDDs but OP blew us away with them being 8TB.

RootBeerGuy ,
@RootBeerGuy@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Honestly, 88 1TB drives would make me envious too.

neo ,

All in the game.

victorz ,

I'm not, but I am envious. Happy for OP though.

9488fcea02a9 , in ‘My whole library is wiped out’: what it means to own movies and TV in the age of streaming services

If buying isnt owning then piracy isnt stealing

BearOfaTime ,

And piracy isn't stealing anyway!

But I still enjoy that phrase.

mnemonicmonkeys ,

Well, not digital piracy. Ye olde piracy absolutely was stealing, plus a medley of other crimes

Emerald ,

I'm sure some digital piracy involves stealing. Someone has to have taken some floppy disk software from a store and walked out without paying for it, then made pirated copies of that disk

evidences ,

Piracy has never been theft, it has always been and still remain copyright infringement. That being said go ahead and pirate, I'm not your dad.

TropicalDingdong ,

That being said go ahead and pirate, I’m not your dad

What am I letters on a screen? I'm not going to stop you.

Lexam ,

You, you could be... If you wanted to.

ShepherdPie ,

You just gotta show up.

evidences ,

Thanks for believing in me child.

_number8_ ,

When record companies make a fuss about the danger of “piracy”, they’re not talking about violent attacks on shipping. What they complain about is the sharing of copies of music, an activity in which millions of people participate in a spirit of cooperation. The term “piracy” is used by record companies to demonize sharing and cooperation by equating them to kidnaping, murder and theft.

onlinepersona ,

Sail the seas with I2P and anonymous torrents. They can't stop it.

Anti Commercial-AI license

empireOfLove2 , in How do you handle family requests that you disagree with?
@empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

If its just for her, I don't really care what content I host for family unless it straight up nazi/gay hate shit. New age "found christian" movies are massive yuck, but innocuous otherwise. She's gonna consume them regardless of whether you host them or not.

Move it to its own library, make sure to rip in low quality (480p low bitrate) so you're not spending too much disk space in her, and let it be. It's not worth driving a rift in the family over.

scrubbles OP ,
@scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech avatar

Good level headed reply, I like this. Others have suggested that as well, I'll move the crud over to her own library, then it doesn't pollute my main library and I can hide it from the others.

Granixo , in Does the form factor between 3.5" and 2.5" matter in a NAS server?
@Granixo@feddit.cl avatar

You'll usually want 3.5" on anything that isn't a laptop for the price and higher max speed

Coasting0942 ,

And theoretical reliability. Stuff breaks down quicker at smaller sizes says my lizard brain

Blue_Morpho ,

Smaller stuff has smaller mass and therefore can be more reliable.

There were portable mp3 players with mechanical hard drives that were reliable despite extreme abuse.

RamblingPanda ,

Except the mp3 players from Archos, which gave up after setting up. Twice.

yggstyle ,

Man my 6000 was immortal. Outlived 2 desktop drives and survived a car roll while in use. I was convinced they had made some blood pact with Nokia lol.

RamblingPanda ,

I got mine, moved some songs into it and an hour into listening the drive started clicking and the player was dead. Amazon replaced it and it was exactly the same. I forgot what model it was, but the discs were extremely fragile.

yggstyle ,

In general laptop drives were a gamble so it's not shocking. I'm curious if I got a later batch or something or just got lucky.

RamblingPanda ,

That was one of those 1 and something inch tiny drives. They were crap

yggstyle ,

Maybe we were talking about different units then - this is the one I had:

https://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Archos+Jukebox+Recorder+20+Hard+Drive++Replacement/103263

Standard 2.5" laptop drive 👍

RamblingPanda ,

Yes. Mine was tiny.

1000016447

noobface ,

I dunno I RMA'd my Nomad so many times.

Addv4 ,

Smaller stuff has to be more complex to get to the lower mass, which is usually what causes the biggest issues. The hdds in those ipods had some extra stuff to make them more reliable, but even then, move them too quickly and they show it.

Blue_Morpho ,

Smaller doesn't need to be more complex. 3.5" drives weren't more complex than 5.25" drives.

A smaller head means a smaller drive actuator. Less mass and smaller size means it can compensate much quicker in response to vibration detection.

Back when full height 5.25" drives were the norm, you couldn't pick up your PC while running without causing an error. Those tiny CF card sized drives failed but took extreme abuse compared to big drives.

Elkenders ,

I tell my wife 3.5" is more reliable but she's not buying it :(

OminousOrange ,
@OminousOrange@lemmy.ca avatar

Oh man, I remember a Philips mp3 player I had for the longest time as a kid. You could hear the little clicks of the hard drive. Lost it on a hike, unfortunately.

JoMiran , in ‘My whole library is wiped out’: what it means to own movies and TV in the age of streaming services
@JoMiran@lemmy.ml avatar
Emerald ,

Digital Restrictions Management

haui_lemmy , in ‘My whole library is wiped out’: what it means to own movies and TV in the age of streaming services
@haui_lemmy@lemmy.giftedmc.com avatar

Pretty straightforward. You need to host your stuff on your own hardware, ideally. You need good backups. You obviously can pay someone to do it for you but it does add complexity. In any case, streaming services are dead men walking by this point I think.

DarkDarkHouse ,
@DarkDarkHouse@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Subscription streaming where you don’t “own” anything probably has a future, but I think you’re right that the writing is on the wall for digital media purchases.

snownyte ,
@snownyte@kbin.social avatar

Probably has a future? It's already here.

ada ,
@ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

"Has a future" in this context means "Streaming media without explicit ownership rights will continue to be here/relevant in to the future, unlike the idea of 'owning' digital media"

haui_lemmy ,
@haui_lemmy@lemmy.giftedmc.com avatar

I dont think streams have a future either. Look at the amount of abuse potential by companies and how far enshittification already progressed. If you have prime, you now get ads in prime video. Its disgusting.

cmnybo ,

This is worse than a streaming service dropping a show. They are removing the ability to play digital files that people purchased.

haui_lemmy ,
@haui_lemmy@lemmy.giftedmc.com avatar

Its happening for quite some time now. Recently sony did that on the playstation. Thats why we need to go back to self hosting the files (without drm).

ch00f ,

What’s funny is that’s how it started. Apple sold movies as early as 2007 before Netflix or Amazon video or whatever and expected you to host the files locally either on your computer or your AppleTV (which had a hard disk drive at the time) and stream it locally over iTunes. If you lost the file, that was supposed to be it.

Of course, you still had to authenticate your files with the DRM service, and eventually they moved libraries online and gave you streaming access to any files you had purchased.

haui_lemmy ,
@haui_lemmy@lemmy.giftedmc.com avatar

I remember that time. I rented a couple of apple movies when netflix wasnt a thing.

poVoq , in Docker - what use is it?
@poVoq@slrpnk.net avatar
danielquinn , in what's your experience with paperless?
@danielquinn@lemmy.ca avatar

Ha! I wrote it! Well the original anyway. It's been forked a few times since I stepped away.

So yeah, I think it's pretty cool 😆

null ,
@null@slrpnk.net avatar

Legend!

Do you use NGX yourself?

danielquinn ,
@danielquinn@lemmy.ca avatar

Actually, I stepped away from the project 'cause I stopped using it altogether. I started the project to satisfy the British government with their ridiculous requirements for proof of my relationship with my wife so I could live here. Once I was settled though and didn't need to be able to bring up flight itineraries from 5 years ago, it stopped being something I needed.

Well that, and lemme tell you, maintaining a popular Free software project is HARD. Everyone has an idea of where stuff should go, but most of the contributions come in piecemeal, so you're left mostly acting as the one trying to wrangle different styles and architectures into something cohesive... while you're also holding down a day job. It was stressful to say the least, and with a kid on the way, something had to give.

But every once in a while I consider installing paperless-ngx just to see how it's come along, and how much has changed. I'm absolutely delighted that it's been running and growing in my absence, and from the screenshots alone, I see that a lot of the ideas people had when I was helming made it in in the end.

null ,
@null@slrpnk.net avatar

Oh wow! Quite a journey!

I'd consider Paperless a hall-of-famer for self-hosted software and something most people who get into self-hosting discover at some point, even if they don't use it.

So thanks for building it, even if you've moved on. You gave the forkers something great to build from.

BCsven ,

It is honestly an awesone tool.

JustEnoughDucks ,
@JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl avatar

Hey man, that is what I used it for, but with the Belgian government! Great piece of software though!

warmaster ,

Thank you very much for the generously contributed code and time while working on it.The effort you put in, will live on for many years to come.

danielquinn ,
@danielquinn@lemmy.ca avatar

Aww! Thank you! It was fun ❤️

zaphod ,
@zaphod@lemmy.ca avatar

Just want to say thank you! Paperless is one of the first things I recommend to anyone considering self hosting their infra. Amazing piece of work!

danielquinn ,
@danielquinn@lemmy.ca avatar

Thanks! The crazy thing is that it's really not that complicated. I'd say the hardest work was in writing the docs :-). It's awesome to hear that people still use it and love it though.

halm , in So SBCs are shit now? Anything I can do with my collection of Pis and old routers?
@halm@leminal.space avatar

So SBCs are shit now?

Nothing changed, the hardware is the same as before. Your little pi servers are still doing the exact same work they did before. The only variables are prices on SBCs vs used small factor x86s, and the short, short attention span of terminally online hobbyists.

Use whatever you like, no need to race after others' subjective (and often hyperbolic) judgment.

Bizarroland ,

Very much this. The allure of raspberry pis was that they were $30 toys that could actually be used to do things that were equivalent to much more expensive computers and computer control systems.

Somewhere along the way they lost the plot, probably when supply chain issues drove their prices sky high along with the compute modules being used for home lab servers, and now cheap knockoffs based off of Rockville chips or ESP32 are just as capable as raspberry pis for a fraction of the cost, and at the same time actual desktop computers in miniature form factor have become so cheap on the second hand market that they are incredibly competitive with the raspberry pi.

Don't get me wrong, pi is a great platform. But the use cases in which it leads the pack have become incredibly narrow.

Actually I can't think of anything that raspberry pi does that can't be done better by a less expensive alternative.

Even the pi5 with the nvme hat is not currently price competitive with a 4-year-old HP ultra small form factor as far as I know.

aard ,
@aard@kyu.de avatar

Actually I can’t think of anything that raspberry pi does that can’t be done better by a less expensive alternative.

That has been true even before the price increase - what still makes me use pis now and then is that just so many people are familiar with them, the standardized form factor with lots of extension modules, and the software support - pretty much any software targeting that kind of use has been tested on pi variants.

I'd nowadays go for using compute modules, though - they're smaller, and you can get them with flash, eliminating the SD card problem many pis had. You can get carrier boards for the compute modules in the classic pi form factor, so you can have the best of both worlds.

Linkerbaan ,
@Linkerbaan@lemmy.world avatar

Rockchip based boards are gaining traction. Whlie still not as easy as Pi's, the community is starting to jump after they got ditched for corporations during Covid. Orange Pi is offering good value these days but it can still require tinkering if your use case hasn't already been done by someone before.

Valmond ,

What's the benefits of compute modules, except the sd card? Doesn't it have to have hardware support to work?

aard ,
@aard@kyu.de avatar

A small form factor, small high density connector. Most interfaces are not populated, as on the regular pis, but just lead out via the connector, so you can decide what you want to expose on your compute module carrier. It has a gbit ethernet chip on board, and a pcie chip - rpi4 also has pcie, but it is hooked up to USB3 there. With the compute module you can decide what you want to do with that.

Valmond ,

Yeah, make a Pi with 1GB RAM, video & ethernet for like 20-30€ and you'd ruin me.

I know about the banana, orange, whetever-pis but in my experience they always needed lots of extra stuff to work (like fucing and recompiling libraries). The Pi "just worked" IMO.

const_void ,

price competitive with a 4-year-old HP ultra small form factor

What's the model number for that?

Bizarroland ,

Elitedesk 800 g4s can be picked up for ~$130 or so depending on where you look

Flixich , in Does anyone else harvest the magnets and platters from old drives as a monument to selfhosting history?

I use the platters like this as my primary long term storage solution. It just saves so much space without the large enclosures.
/s

BCsven ,

You joke but early 90s we had exactly this with magneto optical drives

nis ,

Ah yes. The famous write-only backup solution :D

mikyopii OP , in Finally joined the "work was throwing it out" club
@mikyopii@programming.dev avatar
SubArcticTundra ,
@SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml avatar

I swear I see those old 1280x1024 monitors everywhere. I have one just like that at home. Also came from my dad's old job

mikyopii OP ,
@mikyopii@programming.dev avatar

Mine came from Craigslist. It's perfect for server stuff.

promitheas ,
@promitheas@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

Lord cat thanks you for your offering and expects more next week

RamblingPanda ,

Turn my bum warmer on, peasant!

MonkderZweite ,

Work was throwing it out. Again and again.

Bahnd ,

Cat.

Crogdor , in Broadcom yanks ESXi Free version, effective immediately

There are two kinds of datacenter admins, those who aren’t using VMWare, and those who are migrating away from VMWare.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • selfhosted@lemmy.world
  • incremental_games
  • meta
  • All magazines