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#soho

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Debating buying a new laptop. I have a Dell XPS 17 (9700) w/ 10th Gen Intel and a NV 1650 GPU. It's "fine" but there's this one cheesy Windows CAD app that I run that could use a boost.

What is the short list of non-US laptops that are Linux first or at least Linux friendly these days?

While I appreciate Intel's Quick Sync for additional GPU processing (on-machine content capture), I never do that on my laptop so all AMD would be fine.

I don't need a "super crazy" GPU - just something competent for 3D. 4K/UHD+ and great 16"-17" screens are the other non-negot requirement. Dual NVME for dual boot would be nice.

What non-US laptop vendors do you recommend? Is Lenovo considered non-US nowadays? What's out there? Asus? MSI? Tuxedo? Slim? Generic AliExpress (lol)?

Reccos appreciated.

#Linux#laptop#soho

Seeing some noise about changes to Plex's subscription policy today. I'm out of the loop since converting to Jellyfin so not sure if there was an actual change or not.

Anyway...

The purpose of this message is to reassure Plex users that are considering switching to Jellyfin that it is worth the change.

I used a lifetime Plex Pass for something like 10+ years. I switched to Jellyfin about six months ago.

I have zero regrets.

Every little change to Plex in the last ~five years has been abrasive to the user. One thing that really bothered me was using their centralized sign-in mechanisms. For a locally hosted library why do I need to auth using something off-site, especially when I'm at a remote, low bandwidth site that has intermittent connectivity... and this causes issues. I get it, some of their auto-magic remote access features more or less requires this - still don't like.

What really put a sour taste for me was realizing they are farming usage data. Yeah, eff that noize.

Jellyfin can be a little rough around the edges at times. The UX is not at the same level as Plex. You know what though, this many months in I don't even notice any more. It is perfectly adequate and in the absence of Plex would probably be considered best in class.

Also, Jellyfin is noticeably improving release over release. I notice little tweaks here and there that make it nicer and there has been good improvements in the speed of the backend. A year ago Jellyfin was basically unusable for my large library. Now speed is a non-issue.

Embrace Jellyfin plugins. They are very helpful for meta data and tagging. Migrating my library was mostly painless. There were a dozen or so assets that needed manual intervention and when investigating it was like "how did this even work under Plex?".

Hope this is the "pep talk" needed to give Jellyfin a try.

Replied in thread

@k4m1 @stman yeah, according to the #RTL8139 #datasheet this is basically a very cheap 10/100M NIC designed #embedded systems and low-end/low-cost desktops, and for a device designed and sold in 2006 it made sense, given back then #Gigabit-#Ethernet and Cat.5 cabling was considered high-end.

  • And unlike contemporary / successor chips by #Intel like the famous #i210 (which is still offered as #i219 but mostly succeeded by the #i225 as a 2,5GBase-T version) is way cheaper, which pre-#RoHS - NICs being sold for like € 10 retail & brand-new....

The few issues known only affect like #Virtualization setups, a market this thing was never designed for (most likely also never tested against).

  • I'd not he surprised if a lot of cheap #ThinClients and other systems used these NICs because of the simplicity of integration, being a cheap 3,3V single-chip (+auxilliary electronics) solution and propably costling less than 10¢ on a reel of 10.000.

It's the reason why to this day we see #Realtek NICs being shipped instead of fanning-out & enabling #SoC-integrated NICs with a #MAC & #PHY instead: Because the auxilliary parts for those are more expensive than just getting a PCI(e lane) somewhere and plonking it down.

  • Maybe there have even been some really cheap, low-end #Routers / #Firewalls aiming at #SoHo customers back in those days, cuz back then 16MBit/s #ADSL2 was considered fast, and Realtek's NICs up until recently only delivered like 60-75% of the max. speed advertised, so by the time someone would notice, that gearvwould've been EoL'd anyway and those who did notice right-away never were the target audience to begin with.

Most modern NICs are more complex and demand more configuration / driver support...

Upgraded my Mastodon instances to v4.3.4 from v4.3.2 finally.

With containers it's relatively painless.

That said, I really would like the Mastodon admin interface have settings for post lengths and number of poll items.

It's a bit of a pain to vet and correct whether ./app/javascript/mastodon/features/compose/containers/compose_form_container.js, ./app/validators/status_length_validator.rb, and ./app/validators/poll* need to be changed/updated/migrated for every new minor release. Not a big deal, truly, but it is something to fat finger and something else to track in your environment.

Mastodon is fabulous and complex but a little addition like this would go a long way to ease admin burdens.

cc: @Gargron

Friends...

#Colocation and/or #VPS #options in eastern #Ontario #Canada run by a #Canadian company?

Preferably centred around or near #Ottawa for coloco. VPS less concerned on location other than #Toronto/ #Ottawa/ #Montreal backbone areas.

Any options? Web searching seems to pull up enterprise grade ($$$) or mickey mouse stuff or US companies with Toronto PoPs.

For frame of reference I currently have stuff on Linode/Akamai and Ionos.

Alternatively, if anyone is operating or interested in starting a coloco cooperative in the #Almonte/ #Renfrew/ #Arnprior/ #CarletonPlace/ #Perth areas please reach out. Maybe there is critical mass to build or I can help something already operating...

#homelab#soho#Linux