If the costs of engineering a tower is more than just buying more land, then why build taller?
Figured it'd be something like that. Explains why they get built out in the middle of nowhere since land is cheap.
If the costs of engineering a tower is more than just buying more land, then why build taller?
Figured it'd be something like that. Explains why they get built out in the middle of nowhere since land is cheap.
Tall data centers do exist in cities where land is expensive.
Probably a bit of "hiding in plain sight" that way, too. There are a few big datacenters relatively near me, and they're massive compounds in the middle of even more massive corn fields. Kind of stick out like a sore thumb when you're driving by.
It's almost to "PTSD" since I twitch every time I see a sparkle emoji.
Yeah, I don't know about pre-installed with Android that aren't ad platforms masquerading as consumer hardware. I'd never use one unless it was supported by LineageOS or something. My comment was more "roll your own" in nature.
Maybe one of those HDMI "stick" PCs you can get? There's x86 Android builds you can run or you can do like I did with my media PCs and boot into Openbox and just launch a fullscreen browser right to Jellyfin and control it from your phone. (My main setup uses Emby but should be able to do the same with JF).
I've actually got a portable Jellyfin server I take with me. Built on the OrangePi Zero 2W with a USB->NVMe acting as media storage (as well as the Jellyfin DB). It's got several other services running as well as a second Wifi adapter so it can also act as a travel router.
For playback, I pretty much just use my laptop or phone but have thought about adding one of the "stick" PCs as a client for it.
And you're going to honestly believe a mod's reasoning at face-value?
Irrelevant. As a literate human being, I can click on your username and see your submissions. I can search the alt they listed and read those submissions. And, finally, I can look at those and arrive at the conclusion that both of those seem like trolling and the same person.
Now that you've been sufficiently fed, I bid you adieu with my handy dandy block button.
You mean this post that's not removed? https://kbin.melroy.org/m/unpopularopinion@lemmy.world/t/1316788
(Edit: Fixed wrong post link. That link was to this post 🤦)

Looks like a cromulent, albeit absolute shit, opinion to me. So far so good (using that phrase loosely). BUT... you seem to have behaved very asshole-ish in the comments.


And the modlog says Trolling and Ban Evasion and listed another alt with a similar post history to yours that was also banned for trolling and hasn't posted since your account was created. 🤔
So, maybe instead of whinging you do some self reflection, yeah?
Yep, that's why I haven't messed with Kubernetes either; way overkill for a homelab and especially so since I downsized due to soaring electricity costs here.
The only reason I gave up on Docker Swarm was that it seemed pretty dead-end as far as being useful outside the homelab. At the time, it was still competing with Kubernetes, but Kube seems to have won out. I'm not even sure Docker CE even still has Swarm. It's been a good while since I messed with it. It might be a "pro" feature nowadays.
Edit: Docker 28.5.2 still has Swarm.
Still, it was nice and a lot easier to use than Kubernetes once you wrapped your head around swarm networking.
I had 15 of the 2013-era 5010 thin clients. Most of them have had their SSDs and RAM upgraded.
They've worn many hats since I've had them, but some of their uses and proposed uses were:
Of the 15, I think I'm only actively using 4 nowadays. One is my MPD+Snapcast server, one is running HomeAssistant, ,the third is my backup LDAP server, and one runs my email server (really). The rest I just spin up as needed for various projects; I downsized my homelab and don't have a lot of spare capacity for dev/test VMs these days, so these work great in place of that.
Guess it depends on the height, but yeah. Otherwise, we manage to pump a town's worth of water to the top of a tower well enough. From there, gravity can do the rest.
But there's probably a point where cost for that vs height becomes prohibitive.