Look at the food that is served in hospitals. Garbage.
My worry is that we leave it to the government to feel our future generations with unhealthy food
Look at the food that is served in hospitals. Garbage.
My worry is that we leave it to the government to feel our future generations with unhealthy food
It may be possible to create a UI using a monitoring program like Zabbix.
You could create a custom dashboard that displays all the stats that they need to see.
This of course would be for viewing only, not controlling the schedules, retention etc
Markor on Android and Obsidian on Desktop.
All synced with syncthing
Look at Mikrotik. Very affordable and extremely powerful. Only do this though if you know what you are doing with networking
All my devices use Syncthing via Tailscale to get my data to my server.
From there, my server backs up nightly to rsync.net via BorgBackup.
I then have Zabbix monitoring my backups to make sure a daily is always uploaded.
Ubuntu 22.04 base with a Plex docker container. ZFS as the file system on my host
Brother works incredibly well. Plug and play
Linux Mint is what I use and have no issues with my 3070.
Chimera OS might be something you can look into however I have not used it
Pop OS is also great for nvidia support
I don’t know of any cheap options that include 2x SFP Ports.
Mikrotik has the RB5009 if you can live with only one.
It’s using the Duckduckgo app
Open source isn’t just about auditing the source. Sometimes a bug might be found that the developer might not have the time to fix so someone else with the know-how can contribute the changes to fix the bug. Some goes for any features/enhancements that would be nice to be added
Liftoff is another open-source option that is getting a lot of updates and is very stable
I love my CCR2004-16G-2S+
@rist097@lemmy.world Liftoff is now on the playstore: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.liftoffapp.liftoff&pli=1
NPM is great! I even use it in a production environment at work for a small service and it works beautifully
I have a borg server in the office that takes backups of all my servers. Each server stores their applications backup that gets pulled into the repo. On top of that, the borg server pushes the backup to rsync.net.
All of this is monitored by my Zabbix server
I use borgbackup + zabbix for monitoring.
At home, I have all my files get backed up to rsync.net since the price is lower for borg repos.
At work, I have a dedicated backup server running borgbackup that pulls backups from my servers and stores it locally as well as uploading to rsync.net. The local backup means restoring is faster, unless of course that dies.
Mint works well on my Thinkpads