• 6 Posts
  • 204 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • Yeah I mean I get it because I was also thinking about self hosting for a long time and had a bunch of questions myself.

    The problem is that a lot of the questions were not needed, and a bunch of the other questions I answered myself by just tooling around with the stuff.

    Great comment btw, it’s a good idea to have a list of the services you’d like to run, in order of importance z then work through it.

    I did that then found ways to combine a bunch of services, to the point where I had multiple stand alone VMs that are now just one for Home Assistant and second for Plex and Docker


  • I see a lot of posts like this and it’s always people overthinking something they haven’t tried to do yet.

    So my advice is to just do it.

    You may lose everything at some point in the future, Satan knows I have a few times, but because you’ve actually done it, you can do it again.

    Now, because you’re just thinking about doing it, it seems like a massive deal because you’ve not gone out and done it yet.

    As for recommendations, I use a Proxmox VM with Debian and Docker. My Proxmox does backups, but my Docker compose is also a text document on my PC so I can recreate it all from scratch from that. I also have an idea what I did when I was learning how to do it, and have retained a good bit of that info so I could probably do it without either the backups or the Docker Compose, it would just take longer.

    Just do it





  • I can’t remember the steps (they were simple though) but when my Home Assistant raspi SD card died, I bought a 128gb SSD from AliExpress and a usb-sata cable.

    I then did something to the pi that meant it can boot from the SSD, and flashed the SSD using Balenetcher or RUFUS or whatever (same program I was using to flash my SD cards basically).

    Then it was just a case of plugging in and turning it on.

    Runs exactly the same as with an SD card with less dying because SD cards aren’t meant for a lot of read/write but SSDs do.





  • As a shop floor guy I identify with what you’re saying and if you’re not in one get in a Union.

    But those guys do all the paperwork and business shit. If they don’t do it right then it can blow holes in the business, which pays your wages.

    For example, this week has been a shit show at work because the IT crisis happened. This has meant parts that we need haven’t arrived, and lines have shut down.

    Management have had their heads up their arse trying to keep shit running, sending folk home on holidays, hell lads are taking time off unpaid rather than bum around doing “preventative maintenance”

    Someone has gotta make sure all that shit works out and it ain’t me. I’ve just got to get the parts out when they’re there.

    All I’m saying is that in a good company there’s less “Us and Them” everyone has a role that’s recognised, and individuals are judged on their work rather than their position. You can have good and bad CEOs and Forklift Drivers



  • Me too, except it’s Adguard for me.

    Came in handy yesterday actually. I have a friend who works for a University which was recycling some Chromebooks.

    He managed to grab 3 for me, one for myself and one for my kids.

    Problem is that one of my kids is being supervised through Google Family Link which means for some reason the Play Store won’t work.

    So he is now unsupervised in Family Link just to get the Chromebook working.

    So I’ve just given both my kids static IPs and pointed their Chromebooks at Adguard, then turned on Safe Search and adult content blocking.

    Now I’m fairly confident they’re protected from a lot of the bad shit on the internet.