The first time I felt like I spent most of my time in cutscenes and figuring out what to do. The second time I just plowed through the main story and enjoyed the ride.
The first time I felt like I spent most of my time in cutscenes and figuring out what to do. The second time I just plowed through the main story and enjoyed the ride.
Replayed RDR2 on the PS5, most fun I’ve had with a game in a while.
Im using borgmatic, a wrapper around Borg that has some extra functionality.
Very happy with it, does exactly as advertised.
Wireguard-easy is plain old wireguard with with a nice web interface for management, that’s all.
It’s easy to set up and use, I’d recommend it.
You can sync easily to another device on the same network via ssh for example. You can also call a script automatically after the backup has been created and do your custom stuff in there.
I’m really liking borgmatic myself as a wrapper for Borg.
EDIT: I don’t have experience doing full OS backups. I only make backups of specific directories.
My solution for a power efficient setup was to split it up: all the services I use but don't need all the time, like jellyfin for example, I host on my nas. I only turn that on when I need it.
The stuff that's running all the time, like home assistant, addblocker, etc, I run on a raspberry pi.
Might not work for everyone, but I'm happy with it.
I do exactly the same. I do not have a lot of data I feel a need to backup. I have a nightly job that zips and then encrypts my data, then rclones it to off site storage.
I have one 3B running adguard and a wireguard vpn server. Another 4B doing the same, plus kitchenowl and home assistant.
Software might actually stop developing new bugs. People will stop getting frustrated with technology, and world peace will happen.
I use everything on light mode all the time. Mostly to annoy my fellow developers.
Starting smoking, even long after you quit that devil is still on your shoulder.
You won’t get an attractive price for internet only. Those companies spend tons of money on broadcasting licenses, and as long as they do, you’re going to pay part of that bill, whether you have a TV subscription or not.
The pig that wants to be eaten - Julian Baggini. It’s a book full of fun philosophical thought experiments. Enriched my worldview, and sparked my interest for philosophy.
This man has left behind a concept that could continue to be used for generations. More than anyone could hope to achieve in a lifetime. What a legend.
I had similar requirements. I switched to Baikal, which has been happily running in a docker container ever since.