Also meshcore isn't focused on adhoc mesh networks.
Meshcore relies on well placed repeaters which means better planning.
If you have 3-4 groups you'll need a few repeaters.
Meshtastic everyone is a repeater by default.
Also meshcore isn't focused on adhoc mesh networks.
Meshcore relies on well placed repeaters which means better planning.
If you have 3-4 groups you'll need a few repeaters.
Meshtastic everyone is a repeater by default.
If your item breaks without physical evidence, for example ram dying, swap it with a new one via Amazon.
Yeah it's pretty straightforward.
I do use a lot of CLI for ZFS because it's pretty easy.
https://kurutoga.com/kuru-toga-advance-advance-upgrade/
I have the Kuru Toga for about 3 years during my Civil Engineering undergrad.
It's fantastic although the tip is a little less stable than normal fixed points.
I have been spoiled by the rotating tip. I have the UNI M51017 1P.43 version. (I also got the Ghibli version)
I also have a rotring 600 but that's out of your budget. And honestly it's too expensive for me to justify bringing with me. It stays at home.
Open Media Vault with OMV Extras
I have it on Proxmox. Works like a charm
Any any that mofo
Thank you! I needed a EU focused shop
time.eu redirects to time.com
Maybe I'm blind, but is there a docker composed YAML?
Would like to reverse proxy this into my VPS.
I have 3 main NASes
78TB (52TB usable) hot storage. ZFS1
160TB (120TB) warm storage ZFS2
48TB (24TB) off site. ZFS mirror
I rsync every day from hot to off site.
And once a month I turn on my warm storage and sync it.
Warm and hot storage is at the same location.
Off site storage is with a family friend who I trust. Data isn't encrypted aside from in transit. That's something else I'd like to mess with later.
Core vital data is sprinkled around different continents with about 10TB. I have 2 nodes in 2 countries for vital data. These are with family.
I think I have 5 total servers.
Cost is a lot obviously, but pieced together over several years.
The world will end before my data gets destroyed.
Together, the enclosure and adapter come to roughly $2,300 before the GPU even enters the equation, pushing the total cost of the setup past $5,000. At least for now, that places CopprLink firmly in the realm of enterprise hardware rather than enthusiast gaming.
I'll stick with Oculink for now.