Postgres doesn’t need that much ram IMO, though it may use as much as you give it. I’d reduce it’s ram and see how performance changes.
It’s blinking
Why no real db? Those other 2 features make sense, but if the only option you can use sacrifices the 3rd option then it seems like a win. Postgres is awesome and easy to backup, just a single command can backup the whole thing to a file making it easy to restore.
1 is just not true sorry. There’s loads of stuff that only work as root and people use them.
About the trust issue. There’s no more or less trust than running on bare metal. Sure you could compile everything from source but you probably won’t, and you might trust your distro package manager, but that still has a similar problem.
I use a Chromecast with Google TV, but any Google TV device would work. Run Plex on my computer and it just works.
I use a k8s Cron job to execute backups with Kopia. The manifest is here
I didn’t see anything on Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nosferatu?wprov=sfla1
Uh… If they messed with the iso, they could very easily mess with the NFO
Each instance is available on someone’s localhost.
The bitrate is the rate of the video, not the size of the file. Think of different codecs as different types of compression, like rar vs zip vs 7z
Clearly the best option then is to just use some of each. Like this: “MovieTitle-2000.Your_mom h.265”
If you already have it, it looks like Plex can do it with https://channels1867.rssing.com/chan-55464362/all_p107.html It’ll probably get you most of those features, though it probably won’t be as nice as something purpose built. But if you already have Plex it might be nice to have all your stuff in one place. Alternatively you could probably setup something to download podcasts to your server into a folder that Plex watches.
That makes sense. I think the reason why they’re not represented as files is pretty simple. Data integrity. If you want to get the comments you just query the table and as long as the DB schema is what you expect then it’ll work just fine and you don’t have to validate that the data hasn’t been corrupted (you don’t have to check that a column exists for example). But with files, every single file you need to parse and validate because another application could have screwed them up. It’s certainly possible to build this, it might be slower but computers are pretty fast these days, but it would require more work to develop to solve the problem that the database solves for you.
Man it would be killer if someone made an adapter to run vscode extensions in Geany
It’s not plug and play, but Open telemetry is the self hosted way to go.
Oof, that’s bad… And lazy
Does anyone use Adobe apart from schools? Yes, because the students who used it at school went to work and wanted to use it there.
Try reading on your couch instead