• 4 Posts
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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: March 22nd, 2024

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  • Nope.

    I don’t think there’s any way to know for sure without some left-field software technique.


    My first thought would be something akin to the VAEs already used to encode/decode chunks of video. I dunno how practical it could be adapted as a general video codec, but it has a high compression ratio and a healthy distance from the media patent minefield.



  • For the way I use my laptop I need fairly current hardware

    Then Framework isn’t a great option, as their hardware isn’t particularly new or fast. It’s not really their fault, but just a function of the modularity (which restricts space for cooling/PCB), the small company size (so they don’t get/integrate new chips as quickly).

    This is true even if you upgrade it over time, as other laptops might be a generation ahead with higher end chips.

    The one exception might be the Desktop. And that’s fairly niche.

    Don’t get me wrong, I like Framework. But it’s not a great brand if you really need all the CPU/GPU you can get in a particular size.



  • It got so shallow, though.

    A long time ago, homesteading was the American dream. “Buy your own property, buy stuff for it, build your own life,” and that ethos extended to industrialization, post WWII (with the suburban boom), and even the 80s/90s.

    I feel like that slowly broke with the rise of social media.

    The “American urge” went from home/lifebuilding to encouraging short term, FOMO thinking. “Who cares about the future, look at this beatuful person, they’re using this thing and you need it NOW!” is what basically all modern ads say. Though there are some oldschool holdouts like Berkshire Hathaway, most big buisnesses seem to have adopted that mindset for their own decisions, too.













  • This is a “feel guilty about missing recycling” kind of complaint.

    Having a server run for an hour or two (?) a day is negligible. You use more energy running a fridge, or leaving a few lights on, or browsing Lemmy for a while. Or running a docker container for other services. You release more greenhouse gasses eating beef, or driving anywhere, or even opening your front door a few times, and individual industries are going to use vastly more electricity than a few self hosters ever would. If you own an EV, you’ve probably blown out your entire zip code of self hosters.

    But if it still bothers you, you can find an ewaste smartphone(s) and host on that. This is actually a very neat use case IMO.


    However, if you get to the homelab scale of “an EPYC + 3090s running all the time” that electricity use does start to add up. But that’s quite a rare hobbyist tier, I’d say, and it really shouldnt be running 24/7.