- 0 Posts
- 218 Comments
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
Linux@programming.dev•Chinese semiconductor outfit has Linux MPP repository on Github disabled after a DMCA takedown request & FFmpeg team accuses it of using libavcodec code without attribution
9·12 days agoI bought a Rockchip SBC (Orange Pi 5+), and when it worked it was awesome…but man, the software support (mainly kernel space) is just not there. Exercise in frustration to get everything working at the same time.
Currently running armbian. I don’t think HW acceleration is working, and I don’t think HDMI out is even working, but for my use case it’s a stable config…for now.
But once you got that XFree86 config dialed in, life was awesome.
(Ok looks like Xorg has been around for 21 years, so maybe you were running it instead.)
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Linux is awesome at home, but aren't y'all forced to use Windows at work?
3·1 month agoMac at work. Yabai+sketchybar is no i3wm replacement, but it works ok.
My
.zshrcis basically the same as I use on my personal computers, and aside from a few coreutils differences it…kinda just works. I haveaptaliased tobrewso I can feel more at home.Stock terminal works fine—I use
xtermon Linux, so I’m used to relying ontmuxfor nice features anyway.Basically, I miss the window manager, but practically speaking that’s a about it. (I obviously have
xscreensaverinstalled!)
Slack got me through college on an ancient (even at the time) ThinkPad 600e. Good times!
I had a suite of scripts to log in to the university Linux cluster, download the kernel source and out-of-tree modules (required for the PCMCIA WiFi adapter), compile it, and rsync it back to my laptop.
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What are some of your most useful or favorite terminal commands?
8·1 month agoncis useful. For example: if you have a disk image downloaded on computer A but want to write it to an SD card on computer B, you can run something likeuser@B: nc -l 1234 | pv > /dev/$sdcardAnd
user@A: nc B.local 1234 < /path/to/image.img(I may have syntax messed up–also don’t transfer sensitive information this way!)
Similarly, no need to store a compressed file if you’re going to uncompress it as soon as you download it—just pipe
wgetorcurltotarorxzor whatever.I once burnt a CD of a Linux ISO by
wgeting directly tocdrecord. It was actually kinda useful because it was on a laptop that was running out of HD space. Luckily the University Internet was fast and the CD was successfully burnt :)
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•Both Ford and Mercedes own a /8 block of public IP addresses, that is 16 million public IPV4 addresses eachEnglish
6·1 month ago4*8 = 24
TIL ;)
Each /8 is 1/256th of all IPv4 addresses, not counting reserved/illegal addresses. Not sure where 1/1000 is coming from…
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What folders do you make in addition to the default ones ?
5·1 month agoI’m a
~/tmpman myself.
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Fun/interesting things to self host?English
2·1 month agoMaybe not a service in the typical sense, but setting up your router+server to route your home network traffic through a VPN is a fun project.
My router (MikroTik) supports WireGuard, so I can use it with Mullvad for the whole house—but wg is demanding and it’s a slow router, so while it can NAT at ~1Gbps, it can’t do WireGuard at more than ~90Mbps. So, I set up WireGuard/Mullvad on a little SBC with a fast processor, and have my router use that instead. Using policy based routing and/or mangling, I can have different VLANs/subnets/individual hosts selectively routed through the VPN.
It’s a fun exercise, not sure I implemented it in a smart way, but it works :)
I assume you’re referring to the cuckpdate chair.
Whenever I have a Linux box without Internet I just USB tether an Android phone—if the phone is on WiFi then it uses that (not cell), so it’s basically just a WiFi adapter that’s almost universally supported. (I think it NATs, so in some circumstances won’t work, but good enough for most emergency use cases.)
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Which private (no cloud requirement) wireless home security cameras save footage locally without monthly subscription?
9·2 months agoI would recommend PoE security cameras. You probably want support for RTSP / ONVIF.
I have some Amcrest cameras talking to Frigate. It is completely local—cameras on a separate VLAN that can’t talk to the Internet, footage is recorded on a server running Frigate. Works very well for me. No vendor lock-in is also nice!
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
HistoryPhotos@piefed.social•File clerks at elevator desks in Prague, Czechoslovakia, 1937
1·2 months agoIs this NoSQL?
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
Linux@lemmy.ml•780k Windows Users Downloaded Linux Distro Zorin OS in the Last 5 Weeks
13·2 months ago640k780k ought to be enough for anybody…
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Promised myself I will support them after they go stable. They kept their promise and so did IEnglish
5·3 months agoI used Photoprism years ago, so my knowledge is probably pretty outdated.
My experience of Photoprism was that mobile was not tightly integrated. At the time I used Syncthing to sync photos — it worked ok for me, but I wasn’t going to set it up on my partner’s phone, for example.
Immich Just Works on both mobile and desktop. Multi user is great, sharing is great, and the local ML and face detection work remarkably well.
Whatever works for you is the best of course! Immich fits the bill for me, and it was very much worth it for me to “buy” it.
xscreensaver of course! Note that this is not an option on Windows—jwz hates Microsoft, and any xscreensaver port to Windows is against his wishes.
I use yabai and sketchybar for a tiling WM feel. It’s nowhere as nice as my preferred i3, but it’s ok. Unfortunately it often breaks with major OS updates, so I’m sure to hold back updating my system until yabai is working.
IIRC
sshfswill work on macOS but it’s more work to install. Worth it if allowed by your IT policies and your work can benefit from it.Vim, tmux, and the usual *NIX stuff you might want.
The coreutils are not the GNU coreutils you typically find on a Linux system, so you may find a few differences. I believe
sedis slightly different, and the flags forlsmust be before the filename arguments, but I’ve found it’s mostly silly stuff like that (I used zsh before using macOS, so no problem there).
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Internal domain and reverse proxyEnglish
2·3 months agoRegarding DNS servers, what router do you have? Some routers have simple enough DNS capabilities — I have a MikroTik, and have it set up with DNS entries for internal services (including wildcard). Publicly accessible services just use my registrar’s DNS (namecheap — no complaints).
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
RetroGaming@lemmy.world•Which game would you erase from your memory, in order to experience it fresh once again?English
7·3 months agothe audio had glitched so I missed the voice over
This was not a triumph.
qjkxbmwvz@startrek.websiteto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Probably a good idea to go see how much storage will be necessary...
1·3 months agoYou’re right, for new drives it looks like a little more with this 20GB retailing for $230, or $11.50/TB.
For refurbished, I recently got a factory renewed 12TB Seagate for $112 ($9.33/TB), but that price is now up to $199 for the same drive (!).
VNC? You have your choice of servers, and clients are ubiquitous.
A big gotcha is that you need to be careful with encryption/security, as in classic UNIX style VNC does one thing (remote desktops). It’s easy to forward over ssh though.
You can also use VNC to share, which is not what you want; this depends on the type of server/settings. But you can definitely create a new virtual X11 session and access it remotely.