Software RAID is generally better in every way, also no hardware to fail.
Software RAID is generally better in every way, also no hardware to fail.
Keep multiple reliable (and tested) backups, if something fails restore a backup.
Don’t rely on any storage, RAID or anything else to be recoverable when something goes wrong.
Backrest is also great, just a nice webUI for Restic.
It’s wild just how slow most thumb drives benchmark even with recent models, the Samsung Bar at 36MB/s is just ridiculous, that’s 30 minutes of waiting to fill it up entirely!
A basic V30 microSD card is at least that fast!
Yes I’m waiting until it’s ready for the average user before I recommend it to anyone.
If you want that style of UI use Zen browser, it’s based on Firefox and doesn’t require an account to use it.
Arc is just another crappy browser based on Chrome. The account requirement was and is a huge red flag.
The healthiest is to enable the option to only charge to 80% (or near there, depending on the phone you have).
Otherwise slower charging is better, if the wireless charging doesn’t make the phone hotter than say 30C or so I wouldn’t worry about using it. 45C is the limit for charging Li-ion safely, but it’s better to be cooler.
FolderSync is a good alternative, more battery friendly too!
Current 18650/21700 Li-ion cells are a lot safer than they were 10+ years ago, less chance of thermal runaway and fires now.
Cell quality is important. You want to be using known good quality cells like those from Panasonic, Samsung, LG, etc…
How you manage temperature, charge and discharge is also really important, dendrite growth can cause cell failure in time. Charge temperature is extremely important. So you want to make sure you’re using a smart programmable BMS where you can set up all the protections properly. Ideally one with as many temperature probes as you can find, 4 is good, 8 is better and some will have that many.
Otherwise making sure nothing can short out internally is important too, but it sounds like you’re putting some thought into that. Most critical IMO from what I’ve seen on pre-made battery packs is making sure your series banks are well insulated from each other and have no chance of vibration causing the cells to wear through their heatshrink and touch each other.
They could be away and not checking on things until they get back.
Or potentially their github account was taken over somehow.
Immich mostly since it’s there to handle my backups anyways. Otherwise just the stock one on my S21.
It has always been OK for me.
What do you mean by ‘never loads’? Are you getting a DNS failure, is it failing to load certain resources, or is it just timing out on the initial connection?
Gotcha, that makes more sense when explained that way!
I’m excited to see where it is in another year or so, the idea of using public/private keys for logins is neat for sure.
Interesting, maybe I’ll give it a try. I didn’t know they could just be synced between devices on bitwarden.
There really isn’t one, that’s why Discord is so widely used.
You would just sign into your password manager or browser on both devices and have access to them?
Does it work like that? Everything I see says they’re tied to that device.
If you lose your password, there are recovery options available on almost all accounts.
Fair, I guess I’ve never lost a password because it’s just a text string in my PW manager, not some auth process that can fail if things don’t work just right.
Passkeys are also weirdly complex for the end user too, you can’t just share passkey between your devices like you can with a password, there’s very little to no documentation about what you do if you lose access to the passkeys too.
It can be anything you want.
How you change it depends on the specific server you’re using, I use SFTPGo for a webdav server and when I create a new user it just asks where the data should go.