jflesch

joined 1 year ago
[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 10 points 8 months ago (3 children)

My wife and I use a Nextcloud application called Cospend.

[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 3 points 11 months ago (1 children)

I for one use and self-host Meshcentral. The GUI is ugly, but it works well.

[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

In term of software compatibility, on Linux, you have the option of making chroots. Since the kernel devs makes a lot of effort to preserve compatibility, old software can still work fine. If I remember correctly, some kernel devs tested a while ago some really really old versions of bash, gcc, etc, and they still work fine with modern kernels.

[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 13 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (12 children)

Red Hat. Probably Canonical too.

I know it for a fact since I worked for a bank that chose Red Hat and since I also know someone working for Red Hat.

[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Un peu quand même. Il parle de « remettre le travail et le mérite au fondement de la société », ce qui est juste une façon plus élégante de dire « bouhouh, plus personne veut travailler ».

Parce-que c'est bien connu que « Arbeit macht frei » et donc que le travail est une fin en soit ... :-P

[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Baisser les cotisations sociales et l'impôt sur le revenu pour que le travail paie d'avantage, en compensant le manque à gagner pour les finances publiques par une hausse de la TVA.

Donc .. travailler et gagner plus, pour finalement payer plus ? Chouette comme idée.

(...) en stabilisant le niveau des pensions de retraite en valeur absolue (...)

Alors qu'on a une inflation >5% ? Hébé, les p'tit vieux presque invalides qui peinent déjà à boucler leurs fins de mois vont adorer cette idée.

Bon après, le gars est président d'une boite de conseil. Je n'attend donc pas de lui d'avoir la moindre idée de la réalité du français moyen.

[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

For those wondering, it also works with a Linux VM:

  • Host: AMD Ryzen 9 3900X + Proxmox
  • PCI passthrough for an Nvidia RTX 3060 12GB
  • A Debian VM with 16GB and as many cores as the host have (if you set less cores, you will have to tune cpu affinity/pinning)
  • An HDMI dummy
  • I stream the VM to my office using Sunshine and Moonlight

It's not easy to set up, but it works. I'm able to run some games like Borderlands 3 running at ~50FPS with a resolution of 1920x1080 with visual effects set to the max (important: disable vsync in the games !).

Only problem is disk access. It tends to add some latency. So with games coded with their ass (ex: Raft), the framerate drops a lot (Raft goes down to 20FPS sometimes).

[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

It is "hosted" on your workstation. There is no need for a server-client relationship for self-hosting.

By requiring a server-client relationship, you're making self-hosting uselessly hard to deploy and enforce a very specific design when others (P2P, file sync, etc) can solve the same problems more efficiently. For example, in my specific case, with Paperwork + Nextcloud file sync, my documents are distributed on all my workstations and always available even if offline. Another example is Syncthing which IMO fits the bill for self-hosting, but doesn't fit your definition of self-hosted.

[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (4 children)

No it does not.

Self-hosted implies self-hosted. AFAIK, the end goal is being as autonomous as possible technologically-speaking. Why exclude desktop applications ?

[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

AFAIK, unfortunately Dia hasn't been maintained and hasn't got a new release for a really long time. It's still using GTK2.

[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 4 points 1 year ago (7 children)
[–] jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You can use du -sh to figure out what's using most of the space. Something along the line of:

sudo -i
du -sh /home /usr /var
du -sh /var/*
du -sh /var/log/*
# etc

If it's one of your log files (likely), you can run something like tail -n 100 /var/log/[culprit] or tail -F /var/log/[culprit] to see what is being flooded in this log file exactly. Then you can try to fix it.

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