I would look into thin clients and Lenovo etc. tiny PC for office on eBay. I run old low power low noise rackmount Supermicros which are nice but hard to find at low prices.
I would look into thin clients and Lenovo etc. tiny PC for office on eBay. I run old low power low noise rackmount Supermicros which are nice but hard to find at low prices.
Factor in power bills and heat and noise into your calculations.
Nah. He’s that Youtube dude.
From the mouth of the beast https://developer.hashicorp.com/nomad/docs/nomad-vs-kubernetes What I have read online is that Nomad can have issues at large scale. No personal experience.
In any case since now OpenShift and Nomad are both under IBM’s umbrella there is space for an enterprise Kubernetes distribution, if someone is brave enough.
Nomad isn’t a real alternative to Kubernetes/OpenShift.
Also opnsense, but on thin client.
I hear you, but Proxmox does a great many more things than just run containers. Admittedly, many selfhosters won’t need these.
It’s a NUC so sufficiently poweful. Proxmox isn’t fat by any means. If you run your stuff in containers then Proxmox (I aways install it on top of Debian) is your hypervisor is your base system. You typically don’t install stuff on your hypervisor, though I do some very select things.
Proxmox with Debian containers.
nVidia users are in general SOL for FLOSS users in Linux and BSDland. Wayland devs distinctly not at fault here.
The problem with trying to ignore Wayland is that Xorg is abandonware.
You’re probably drawing about 400-450 W.
My current supplier rate is about 0.6 EUR/kWh. I make some 1/2 to 2/3 of my power myself, for a price that’s less than half of that.
How many W are you pulling, on the average? Or kWh per year.
SELinux rights can be a problem.
My primary consideration is all the expensive storage filled up by vapid image macros. 80 GB goes a long way for just text.
Pictrs should have been an optional microservice by default. Commenting here to keep track of this thread since this is useful.
I was more referring to things like e.g. https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Hard_dependencies_on_systemd
Notice that it’s from 2021 and just for Gentoo. This is what people politely describe as invasive.
The problem of systemd is that it hasn’t been just a replacement of init as they initially claimed, and now deny they ever did. Things like Mono, Gnome and systemd are bad for the ecosystem long term.
An init done by constructive people wouldn’t be a problem at all.
You seem to trust Nvidia. I don’t.