Zabbix
Avid tech and PC enthusiast. System Administrator by day, Dad by night.
Zabbix
I use Nala for package management in my Debian systems. I’ve created aliases for ‘apt’ & ‘apt-get’ to use Nala instead.
Also ‘ll’ alias for ‘ls -lah’.
That’s about it though.
Elon probably unplugged a whole datacenter again.
https://futurism.com/elon-musk-moved-twitter-servers-himself
We just renewed support for our socket based perpetual licences for 3 years. This gives us plenty of time to find an alternative solution.
It’s how long it takes the system to render the next frame. High frame times are no good. Equates to lower average fps, and poor player experience. You also want stable frame times. This equates to smooth gameplay and less “stuttering”. Anything under 20ms is considered good. 10ms and less is great. Anything over 50ms will be perceived by the player in a negative way.
gasp
I’m shocked
I highly doubt people are uninstalling their ad blockers. If anything they’ll just disable it on YouTube if it’s that big of an issue to them.
Firefox + uBlock still works for me on desktop. For my SmartTV and my phone I’m using other frontend applications to get around the ads.
It’s actually a completely separate product from Veeam Backup & Replication. Not a connector or add-on to VBR. Would be nice if it was.
What I’m trying to achieve is backup and archival of data for long term retention and recovery.
There are certain legal obligations that as an organization we need to fulfill. Being able to recover emails and data from up to 5 years ago. If a user leaves or deletes an email or a file that we suddenly need to reference years down the road, that is not possible with the retention tools MS gives us.
So I’m looking for a solution that allows me to backup this data daily and store it for 5 to 7 years for future reference and recovery if needed.
Looking to perform daily backups of all users OneDrive files, SharePoint data, Teams (teams, channels, files, tabs), Exchange Online mailboxes.
This would be for long-term retention. 5+ years. Thinking of using object storage like Wasabi as a destination.
I think this is what OP is talking about. Links show up, but when tapping on them they don’t work.
It took all of a couple of minutes for the download option to show for me.
I’ve tried a handful of the Android apps and so far the most comfortable one for me is Liftoff. But I loved Boost for Reddit, so I’m very much looking forward to trying the Lemmy version.
370W average.
3 x Lenovo x3650 M5 (Proxmox Nodes)
TP Link TL-SG3428X switch
Raspberry Pi 3B+ (physical Pi-hole server)
Generic Mini PC Intel N3150 (OpenVPN client)
Dell Optiplex (OPNSense firewall)