This blood is flowing through a warped mind.

  • 4 Posts
  • 26 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 19th, 2023

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  • -RYknow@sh.itjust.worksOPtoPlex@lemmy.mlServer suggestions?
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    11 months ago

    Yeah, I love the Hyve Zeus servers. I currently have three making up my proxmox cluster. They are great so long as you have another system for storage, as they only fit 2x 2.5" drives otherwise. I have my cluster linked to an SSD pool on trunas via 10gb for all my vm’s.

    As for the GPU - Yeah, it’s too long because of the cooler. It’s possible I could get an alternative cooler, and it’s something I could look at. Although the server I bought for it has already been sent back since the gpu didn’t fit.

    The NUC isn’t a bad idea, but I got a good deal on the P2000 and was hoping to utilize that. I recently started hosting plex for my in-laws, and want to get our daughter setup with an account with her going off to college. My current plex setup works fine, but as I’m adding people accessing it remotely, I just figured it would be nice to put the P2000 into play.





  • My first printer was a creality cr6 (kickstarter edition), and it’s been absolutely fantastic. I use my printer to solve problems mostly by designing my own parts for things. My printers really are tools to me. My cr6 doesn’t get used a lot, but I turn it on, run the auto level, and hit print. I’ve printed roughly 2000 hours with it, and I’ve had one jam, and zero failed prints (I’ve stopped a couple for various reasons, but I’ve never walked in to find a spaghetti mess). I upgraded to the community firmware, a dual drive extruder, and capricorn. Also, I print almost exclusively in PLA.

    My second printer is a kingroon kp3s. I’ve printed very few parts with it. I got it as a toy, and plan to install klipper and just be able to print fast. I like the small for factor, direct drive, and linear rails. It’s a decent printer, but it’s not as “easy” as my cr6 (no ABL, and my bed seems to have a high spot right in the middle). The prints I’ve printed for testing are small, and the quality has been really good. I just haven’t had a lot of time to play with it and really dial it in.

    All this said… I’d by a mk4 in a split second for my use case. Again, as a tool that I turn on every few months, prusa is a known workhorse. My only complaint with my cr6 is it’s slow… And the mk4 would take care of that.




  • I’m currently running pfsense, and then mikrotik and ubiquiti switched and ubiquiti AP’s. I’m slowly removing the ubiquiti switches and moving to mikrotik as I’m upgrading to 10gbe. Mikrotik switches have a reputation of being reliable, capable, and cheap-ish. So far I like them. While I love ubiquiti’s single pane of glass approach with the unifi controller, I wanted to get away from that a bit. I work in IT, and most things I encounter don’t have that… And are configured via cli and or web interface. When I built my home network I jumped into ubiquiti for the ease. Now I’m back tracking for more learning.




  • Tumbleweed with KDE is my favorite flavor. I have all sorts of machines and vm’s running which use Debian, Ubuntu, Leap, Rocky, and Alma.

    Tumbleweed is my daily driver. Ubuntu and Debian have been my primary vm distro, but Alma and Rocky I’ve been dabbling with. I use Leap on various apple machines I have as it seems to play nicer with the stupid Broadcom wireless adapters apple uses.





  • No. I meant 3.5" your original post listed >= 4 3.5" bays.

    In my hyve Zeus servers I run two ssd’s in a mirror, and then host all my data on a trunas server with an nfs share. That said, ssd’s are really reasonable (just bought 2 x 2packs of 1tb ssd’s for $66 each). If space requirements exceed what you can do with some ssd’s, then I get it.

    I have an r510 as a trunas server. It uses well over a 100 watts, so I can at least provide you that info. Haha.