Meh, even then. If they’re 60MB each that’s only 120GB.
Noticeable difference loading the page? Loading photos? Uploading photos?
Photo files are relatively small, so an HDD is absolutely fine.
Oh thanks for the heads up
I installed MagicMirror onto a Raspberry Pi using a pre-made Magic Mirror OS image (can’t remember where I got that, but I think it’s relatively “official”, so maybe their website? It comes ready to go with Docker and everything you need set up.
Then I installed this https://github.com/pelaxa/MMM-ImmichSlideShow and configured it.
I actually found some additional configuration options by going back in the chain to the project it’s based on (linked at the top of the readme). Their documentation included some additional stuff that actually works with MMM-ImmichSlideShow. Edit: Looking at my config again, and all the stuff is in the MM-ImmichSlideShow documentation now. Maybe they updated it.
Then I hooked up an old monitor, put it in vertical mode, and that’s it.
It was actually kind of difficult to figure out how to get the display to work in vertical mode. A lot of old forum posts are the “old” way of doing it. I ended up making a cronjob that runs 60 seconds after boot and runs some command that rotates the display. I’ll dig it up if you need me to, but since MMM-ImmichSlideShow is still broken it’s not turned on right now so I can’t check it. Here’s the line from my crontab to rotate the display: @reboot sleep 60 && DISPLAY=:0 xrandr --output HDMI-1 --rotate right
Immich is the only thing I run where I check the change log before doing any sort of update. It’s worth it, though. Great software.
This update broke my janky little raspberry pi “photo frame” which uses MagicMirror and a plugin. I probably just need to rename a port in the plugin or something (or wait for an update).
This is honestly the most confusing and complicated part of self-hosting.
I agree! It took me years to finally decide to buckle down and wrap my head around what a “reverse proxy” is. Once I figured it out things became so much more usable and fun.
Combined with DNS redirects in my LAN (to get around NAT loopback), things are very easy to use.
Yeah, it only matters with things like electric shavers (although those are all battery operated now… so it actually doesn’t matter!), vacuum cleaners, etc. I know if you plug a 120v appliance into 230v it might kill it, but I guess if you plug a 230v appliance into 120v it just won’t turn on or will run slower.
Interesting. Are they both 120v?
How are you running the services?
This is easy with docker. 80 and 443 would be the “inside the container” ports, and you’d choose different “outside the container” ports to prevent conflicts.
For example:
1234:80
2345:443
Exactly how you type it in depends on if you’re using Docker Compose, etc.
If you’re exposing these to the internet by opening ports: don’t.
Use a reverse proxy. The reverse proxy gets 80 and 443 exposed to the internet and handles the security of serving your other services via the ports that you chose above.
Just flexibility and future proofing. Having/building a music library is very time consuming, so I’ve chosen to do it properly so there’s no work in the future.
Since my stuff is all FLAC it doesn’t matter what new lossy formats become popular 25 years from now. My music server will convert it on the fly to stream it to my phone.
The only downside to keeping everything in a lossless format is that over the years new formats emerge. mp3 used to be the only game in town, but now we have multitudes of lossy formats to pick from. By having your collection in mp3 format, you aren’t able to say “hey, this new format looks cool, let me switch to that”. By storing everything in a lossless format (FLAC), you can convert for mobile as you see fit.
For non-consumable stuff that’s really great. For food items I don’t want a resealable sticker. There’s a benefit to being tamper evident in those cases. It’d be nice if they were easy-peel and not restickable. That’d be dope!
These are more expensive than “free”, but if you decide to make it look original it’s probably an option https://www.repairclinic.com/Shop-For-Parts/a8c70/Dryer-Handle-Parts
I sort of get what they’re saying. No other one country contributes more than 48.69%. They just said it wrong, probably.
I just updated my comment above with more info, FYI.
I’m not a pro at Docker, but I’ve spun up over 30 different services using Docker Compose so I’m more than a novice. I would say that Lemmy’s documentation is the worst I’ve ever seen.
The website points you at that compose file which is (I think?) designed for Ansible. I think there’s another example somewhere without all the jibbery joo, but I can’t search for it right now.
Edit: here it is https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/blob/main/docker/docker-compose.yml
No idea why they don’t link to that one in the first place. I’d fix it if I knew how.
Is the problem that the bags aren’t long enough? Fill the bottom of the can with something the bag can rest on.
If that’s the driver in the picture, I just can’t help but feel sorry for the guy. His whole life he’s been told having a fancy car means he’s made it in life, but nobody ever taught him how to not look like a slob. Some financing department somewhere is raking in their 20% on the loan, and the insurance company is happy to provide the absolute minimum coverage required by law.
Does this work with all insurance again? I think it stopped working for instances on 0.19.4 and higher last I heard.