anotherandrew

joined 1 month ago
[–] anotherandrew@mbin.mixdown.ca 34 points 1 day ago (2 children)

It's funny; I recommend Apple stuff for practically all the same reasons you don't. The walled garden pisses me off sometimes but when I talk to friends using Android stuff and their gripes it really reinforces that I made the right decision for my family, just as you have for yours. What I find even more amusing is that I design embedded linux devices, all my servers/vms are Linux based and I really enjoy using Linux... just not supporting/using it as a primary UI.

Not shitting on your choices at all, I know that many people really like/enjoy the Android side as much as I do the Apple side. Chacun à son goût and all that.

[–] anotherandrew@mbin.mixdown.ca 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I've been lucky I guess -- haven't had a failure with force formats before, I always thought if it couldn't download the format I wanted it was spinning the conversion over to ffmpeg. I haven't really paid that close attention to the output. :-)

[–] anotherandrew@mbin.mixdown.ca 3 points 3 days ago (3 children)

I have two depending on what I'm grabbing is part of a playlist (where I want to maintain order) or not:

--download-archive archive.txt --write-auto-subs --sub-langs en --embed-subs -o "%(upload_date)s_%(title)s_%(id)s.%(ext)s" -S res,vcodec:h264,acodec:m4a

or

--download-archive archive.txt --write-auto-subs --sub-langs en --embed-subs -o "%(playlist_title)s/%(playlist_index)s_%(upload_date)s_%(title)s_%(id)s.%(ext)s" -S res,vcodec:h264,acodec:m4a

that --download-archive archive.txt is a godsend for when I rediscover something I've already grabbed. I often move the files to better locations after, but archive.txt doesn't care. Embedding the subtitles, forcing h264/m4a (because more and more things are webp it seems), and renaming the file to the title + youtube ID are what make up the rest.

Interesting that OpenProject is actually a fork of Redmine -- I've got an old Redmine instance I've been using on and off for well over a decade and now I am going to see how tricky it is to migrate over. It sounds like it used to be straightforward but I don't know if that's still the case.

Thanks for the lead!

it was more about just being able to run it on osx again since they (Apple) removed 32-bit support some time ago.

[–] anotherandrew@mbin.mixdown.ca 6 points 1 week ago (5 children)

This makes me sad that the only way I can play Portal (or Portal 2) is in a 32-bit VM. a 64-bit remake would be so awesome.

That's an excellent question. I only know of them because mxtoolbox and other checkers list them.

Kind of a piggyback on this -- is there a favoured "search my saved links from karakeep/linkwarden/hamster.io and show them first before feeding the search terms to google/bing/whatever" extension for your browser?

[–] anotherandrew@mbin.mixdown.ca 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

How did you do this? I have only seen the google postmaster tools and they're absolutely useless unless you are sending significant email volume. If you're a little guy they won't even give you basic reporting on deliverability.

[–] anotherandrew@mbin.mixdown.ca 13 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

There was a recent thread on reddit about this, where I wrote this comment (copied here):

I've been hosting my own email for a long time (almost 25 years).

Today it's better than it was, but there are some hurdles:

  • Microsoft has their own system, but it's reasonably easy to get listed
  • Google does their own thing, and it's IMPOSSIBLE to get anywhere
  • UCEPROTECTL3 is just a fucking extortion scam

When I switched providers, I found out I was in a "bad IP neighbourhood". Microsoft wanted a letter from my VPS provider saying that I am in control of the IP I wanted listed, and that was not too hard to get. Also, Microsoft's blacklist management is sane - you can log in, see the status, raise issues and get a hold of people. A little frustrating, but workable.

Google, on the other hand... You can't participate in their spam system unless you have a minimum volume of email, which means little guys like me who send maybe 50-100 emails a day end up in gmail's junk folders by default and there's abso-fucking-lutely nothing you can do about it. There's no one to report it to, there's no way to fight it... they simply don't care. And whether an email gets flagged as junk or not seems completely random. It has nothing to do with the content as far as I can tell. All you can do is contact people from your personal gmail and ask them to check spam/whitelist. It's been years and I'm still waiting for the "eventually your domain will get whitelisted globally" bullshit to happen.

That leaves UCEPROTECTL3. Fuck these guys sideways. They block entire ASes and no, you can't get an exception made. You can pay them to get whitelisted which is why I call them an extortion scam. They're the only blacklist I'm on and I'll be fucked if I'll pay them to get off it. Bunch of fucking pretentious scammers.

Everything else is pretty easy: DNS, DMARC, DKIM, SPF... it's hoops to jump through but not overly difficult. Ensuring you've got SMTPS set up and constraining the encryption protocols to get it tight takes some iterative work, but nothing too difficult.

I totally understand why people give up. This is a huge problem with these gigantic monolithic companies -- they hold way too much power over the internet and there's no way to hold them accountable.

I've been selfhosting various things for almost 25 years now. Started with email/web, but now I've got the following (in no particular order):

  • email (postfix/dovecot)
  • web (nginx)
  • shared notes (obsidian, but also through dovecot)
  • calendar (davical)
  • telephony (asterisk)
  • replicated storage (syncthing)
  • media server (plex)
  • home automation (homeassistant, mosquitto, grafana, influxdb)
  • power monitoring (empora device on the breaker panel + a few smart outlets talking to homeassistant)
  • security cameras (securityspy)
  • irrigation (a controller of my own design, adding OpenSprinkler support this year)
  • offsite backups (duplicity + rclone)
  • project management/issue tracking (redmine)
  • social media (gnu-social + lemmy, but also testing mbin)
  • bookmark management (karakeep)
  • local copies of web stuff (yt-dlp, hamsterbase, singlefile)
  • VPN (openvpn)

Virtualization is mostly docker containers, but also some ESXi/VMWare Fusion. I also have Obsidian in the mix but that's not really a self-host but more of a way to organize/access my data. I have also been doing a (very!) little bit of experimentation with local LLMs, but it's all on ARM, using either the GPU or the NPU available on the RK3588.

This stuff either exists on an OVH VPS for the "internet facing" stuff or on an old Dell C6100 blade server. ESXi uses one blade and another blade runs Debian and talks to an old SATA/SAS disk shelf I got for $50 to see if I could make it work (it was super straightforward). I have a bunch of 2T and 4T "spinning rust" drives in two RAID6 arrays (mdadm) and then carve out storage for various things using LVM. I am experimenting with zfs on the VPS but am not a big fan of it. I used to run OpnSense on another blade since I couldn't find a router which would properly shape gigabit internet traffic, but now I'm using an ER605 and it seems to be doing quite well. I have a tiny KeepConnect device which will physically cut power to the cable modem if it can't see the internet which is very helpful since the biggest source of trouble for me has always been the damn internet service doing weird things when I'm not at home.

I've even been working toward "self hosting" my own educational electronics stuff for my kids using https://microblocks.fun/ (the actual project is called smallvm) - think scratch running completely in the browser and executing code on a "vm" which is actually running on a microcontroller over BLE or serial.

This sounds like a shitload of work and sometimes it can be, but one of the best parts of self hosting is that once it's set up, it hardly ever has to be updated/changed. Security updates are the biggest reason of course, but a LOT of this is not on the open internet so I can be more lenient about keeping things up to date. I also try to keep everything that needs a database to use ONE database (postgres), which also makes it easier to back up or use data from several tools in a new way. Honestly it's largely fire and forget these days. I add more space or replace drives as needed and try not to touch things otherwise. I keep a set of notes to help me remember not only the how but the WHY I set things up in a particular way, and those notes are accessible 100% offline. (After all, what good are notes on how things are set up if the thing you've stored them on isn't working?)

My infrastructure at home (C6100, SAS shelf, switch, etc.) consumes about 700W 24/7 which is not awesome but I figure the power bill saves a lot of service costs. The VPS runs me about $30/mo.

[–] anotherandrew@mbin.mixdown.ca 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

That sounds pretty great - do you have a link to your site using this?

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