Geoffman05

joined 2 years ago
[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 2 points 2 years ago

I only lost $100 last weekend. I realized recently that the NVMe that I thought was in my server was actually a 2.5” SSD. Not sure how I forgot about that…. Then I upped my Ram from 16 to 32 (maxed out) to allow room for additional VMs.

[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

Your server build lacks storage or power supply.

Your general use lacks storage. I would also recommend adjusting to i5/16GB for general use. If you end up gaming then you could have an excuse to bump it to 32GB along with of course a video card.

[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

Use Proxmox as your hypervisor then you can run as many and how many different types operating system you want on top of it all at the same time.

[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

UDM-PRO, USW-Aggregation, USW-Enterprise-24-POE, U6-LR… build a server with i5/32GB NVMe boot drive, then some RAID drives… I took out a loan in this scenario as $1,000 wouldn’t cover my entire rack getting blown up.

[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

What a blast from the past! I still have my 74GB floating around somewhere.

[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

I doubt you would notice much a performance hit if any. What you’re losing out on is reliability. You playing games and downloading/executing stuff causes extra processes to run that normally wouldn’t on a server. The more processes running the more chances for a glitch in the matrix to crash the machine. You could also do an update that breaks compatibility with other programs (not so much an issue with Docker). The biggest point of a dedicated sever at home is the fact that you set it then don’t fuck with it - This leads to higher reliability.

 

Hey everyone,

I figured this may be a good sub to post in given the connection between data hoarding and NAS's.

I have a Buffalo LinkStation LS220DE (LS220DE3F5) Version 1.78-0.03 and am running into issues getting SMTP to work. I go to send a test email and get a very generic error "Because of an error, the following process did not complete: Sending test email notification."

  • SMTP Server Address: smtp-mail.outlook.com
  • SMTP Port: 587
  • Authentication Type: LOGIN (SMTP-AUTH)
  • SSL/TLS: STARTTLS
  • Username: user@outlook.com
  • Password: App & Normal both tried (MFA enabled / disabled, respectively)
  • Subject: This has text as it is marked required
  • Recipient(s): I've tried both an Outlook and Gmail email

I'm not sure what I'm missing or if it's the simple fact that this NAS is out-dated as hell where it's a no longer supported feature. Also, at my wife's request, I tried turning it off then back on again.

[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

We have cameras covering the driveway, front yard, backyard, garage, family room downstairs and living room upstairs. The two inside cameras are angled to capture as much of the upper and lower living spaces as possible.

  • driveway so we can see people coming and going such as food or friends… if we had any.
  • front yard to cover anyone that may park in front of our house instead of driveway otherwise we wouldn’t know about them
  • backyard to keep an eye on the kid playing and knowing when the neighbor kids jump the fence to grab their balls
  • garage so my wife can yell at me when I’m doing something unsafe or a visual confirmation we closed the garage door (got an app for that but physically seeing it is more reassuring)
  • living room/family room to keep tabs on the kid when we are elsewhere in the house as well as to get a quick glance when we aren’t home and get worst-case scenario thoughts in our head

Basically, I’d only question his motives if he wants to install a camera in the bedroom or bathroom.

[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

I have multiple layers of ad blocking.

  • Pihole for DNS
  • Firefox w/uBlock Origin & SponsorBlock (YouTube) on every PC
  • Brave browser on iPhones.
  • SmartTubeNext (YouTube) on Chromecast
  • All of my mobile devices are connected by VPN to utilize Pihole when I’m not home
[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

I have a 2 bay NAS in RAID1 that houses all of our documents, family photos, etc. This is pushed to the cloud with up-to 30 day versioning of individual files.

RAID is for data redundancy. Cloud is for backup.

[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

I used to use Ubuntu VMs on Proxmox host but I’ve switched to Debian a year or so ago.

[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago (3 children)

Lookup pihole and unbound. You’ll get ad blocking along with your own dns resolver. There are several near-copy-paste tutorials out there.

[–] Geoffman05@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

You definitely don’t want to expose your internal services to the Internet. If you must, such as a website, use a reverse proxy (Nginx Proxy Manager). Everything else should be accessed from your VPN.

What registrar do you use? Look up “ddclient” and find a tutorial for configuring it to your registrar. When properly configured, it will push your current IP every X minutes so that example.com will translate to you even if your IP changes.

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