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johnbwoodruff.com
Senior Software Engineer | TypeScript | Angular | Homelab | Twitch: Jorgnaan | Dabble in photography | Always building something fun | he/him
230 posts 354 followers 850 following
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BLUESKY SEAN?? YES SEAN! YESSSSS!!!
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I haven't used it in years but I also haven't needed something like it. I've used Screen Studio for making "sizzle"-style videos, but those are usually very simple short things. Not sure what course content creators are using these days.
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If costs keep rising (which I'm sure they will) and electricity gets more expensive (I'm sure that will too) then I'll likely start looking more seriously at getting some lower powered machines to make up my homelab. Enterprise gear is fun but not at such high costs.
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Oh no. Does that mean in the future you'll be the "geriatric gen z"? 👴
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I know I could use kubernetes for better distribution and management but honestly I deal with that all day at work and I'm not looking for more of that haha. I like the simplicity of docker compose and portainer for insights. If my homelab gets too complex then it becomes a chore rather than fun.
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I LITERALLY SCREAMED WHEN THAT CAME ON
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That's sick!! Stoked to use this!!
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I already have a lifetime Plex Pass and it works flawlessly for me so I have stuck with it. I'm sure one day there will be a reason for me to try Jellyfin, but I've been very happy with Plex for years.
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This post is brought to you by the literal cardboard I received from my local Little Caesar's this evening. I'm still not over it.
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I made a (pizza) pie chart about it. It's scientific and peer reviewed by my siblings and close friends.
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Those experiences have me in a chokehold. The utter magnificence of that glorious Little Caesar's pizza potential has me coming back regularly, hoping I'll experience it again. I'm plagued by my palate's memory of previous pizza perfection. And yet, 9 times out of 10, I am disappointed.
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😍 Okay how sneak peak is this? Like weeks away or days away? 🤣🙏
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This is sick. I'd love to see if integration like this could help Cursor Agent to identify things such as areas for optimization if the project graph is overly complex, for example. So many possibilities there!
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Update: It's very fun.
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WAHOO!! I have a playlist that is full of yours and Rozen’s Zelda music and I’m dying to add this in. 🤣 You’re awesome, thanks for your musical gift! 😁
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@theophanyremix.bsky.social any chance this will make its way to Apple Music sometime? 🙏🤞😁
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YES!! I listen to Time's End 1 & 2 almost on repeat while I'm coding throughout the day and this remix is PHENOMENAL!! Absolute chills!!!
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The hairs you're experiencing is commonly called "stringing". It's quite simple to remove with a blow torch/lighter that you VERY quickly brush across them. Kind of like what you might do to de-fray fabric. Be extremely light because PLA melts at low heat so you don't want to ruin the print.
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There's two parts to your question. If we're talking about PLA or PETG, then basically any kind of enclosure helps a lot with any smell. If you mean ABS or ASA, they emit harmful fumes and should absolutely be printed in a proper enclosure with filters, ideally in a well ventilated space.
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Yep I’ve had that pointed out to me, I was too focused on taking a cool picture 🤣
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It’s a color changing shiny silk filament that is half blue half purple. The light pieces are also color changing but it’s not as obvious in the picture.
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Oops. 🤣
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So there is nothing sensitive in this document itself, and it merely points to the locations of the sensitive pieces of information. (whether passwords or documents) So the note is just on my phone shared with her. Nothing sensitive to worry about.
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My master password for 1Password she knows already and it's documented as well in a secure location she knows. Then my 1Password has everything she needs for all account access. Then in my document I mention what accounts are called in case it's something not totally obvious so she can find them.
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Anyway, I will once again recommend everyone does that. Just in case. Leave your loved ones with the tools they need to succeed if you end up not being able to be there with them due to an accident or illness or otherwise.
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While my #homelab post was the original inspiration for doing this, I was able to document a ton of critical information that would be critical in the event of an untimely death. You don't realize how much you assume your spouse knows until you document it all. Now I know she'll have that info.
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It was a mixture of morbid and satisfying documenting a bunch of stuff in case I die unexpectedly. Like I mentioned in the original thread I'm obviously planning on living a super long healthy life, but there's no guarantees. I want to make sure my wife wouldn't be left with a huge burden.
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Definitely looks like wet filament to me.
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If I was being properly scientific about this I'd measure power draw on each at idle and under load and compare. But I don't have time to do that when the main thing I'm trying to do is not run two enterprise servers simultaneously which doubles the power usage. 😂
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It entirely depends on a number of factors such as the CPU in each as well as what the servers are doing, but the newer CPUs in the R730 are more power efficient so all other things the same (i.e. workloads you run on it) you'll generally see lower power utilization on the newer server. YMMV though.
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I never intended to run both servers simultaneously for long, only as long as it takes to migrate things over. (which I've delayed a lot and done veeeeery slowly lol) That should also help with the temperature in my server room during the summer. (which is not horrible, but not great either)
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I spun up hoobs before I really invested in my home assistant setup. It was great at the time, but now I want to do it all through HA, hence why I’ll be moving HomeKit integration off Hoobs soon. But for someone who doesn’t want to use HA, it’s great! Very easy to use.
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I’ve got my Pi 3 acting as a qdevice for my Proxmox cluster. My Pi 4 is currently running Hoobs for HomeKit integration with some of my devices but I’ll likely migrate that to Home Assistant HomeKit Bridge soon. At that point I’ll find some other use for the Pi.