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grappler commented on Terror on repeat: A rare look at the devastation caused by AR-15 shootings   washingtonpost.com/nation... · Posted by u/shmde
dadjoker · 2 years ago
Oh geez. What this article ignores are 1) the fact that an AR-15 is used in a tiny minority of shootings and 2) how many people also defend their own lives and the lives of others using an AR-15.
grappler · 2 years ago
I think the point is that if the same shooters had only more 'normal' guns available to them, they would not have been able to cause nearly as much death and injury before being stopped.
grappler commented on The Cloud Computer   oxide.computer/blog/the-c... · Posted by u/CathalMullan
bobthecowboy · 2 years ago
If you're willing to spend money on rack-mounted gear you definitely have options, and what you get sort of depends on what you're interested in playing with.

A lot of homelabbers (and even some small businesses) go for Proxmox as a virtualization distribution. I don't use it myself, but IIUC it's effectively a Debian distro packaged to run KVM/LXC, with support for things like ZFS, Ceph, etc. It has some form of HA, an API used by standard open source devops tools, handles live migration, etc.

So buy some used rack-servers on Ebay (or new, if you're ballin'). A lot of businesses sell their old stuff, so you can pick up a generation or two out of date for a good price. If you want to do fancy stuff like K8s, Ceph, etc you'll probably want at least three nodes, ideally more, and a bunch of disks in them. Networking gear is a sort of pick your poison thing. A lot of people love Ubiquiti gear; a lot of people hate it. TP-Link is another that's good and budget friendly. StarTech sells smallish racks (including on Amazon), if you want to start there.

It won't look exactly like SoftIron's HyperCloud or Oxide's Cloud Computer, but you can certainly get pretty sophisticated.

Not sure if this answers your question, but other great spaces to explore are the 2.5 Admins and Self-Hosted podcasts.

grappler · 2 years ago
I'm really thinking mostly about the hardware part here, and maybe just enough layers of the stack to feel like an integrated hardware setup. Let the nerds play with whatever software they want above that.

To go ahead and dream a bit:

I'd hope for an online configurator like the one SoftIron's HyperCloud has [1] but instead of "talk to a sales rep", show a price for what you just configured, like you're configuring a macbook.

Relatedly, there should be a standard rack form factor in the size category of NUCs and Mac Minis, rather than having to go all the way to the 19 inch monster racks that medium to large businesses use. If it were nailed down to the point of being able to blind mate (just learned that term from Oxide's article here!) gear into it, that would be kind of perfect.

  1. https://softiron.com/hypercloud/configure/

grappler commented on The Cloud Computer   oxide.computer/blog/the-c... · Posted by u/CathalMullan
bobthecowboy · 2 years ago
I work at SoftIron, another startup in this space. Our HyperCloud product might be interesting for you. I'm not in sales, so I can't comment on the prices, but I'd guess we're much more competitive since you don't actually need to buy an entire rack of our gear at a time.

That said, where this product-space gets tough is actually scaling it down. It's pretty challenging to create something that is remotely stable/functional in a homelab (space/power/money) budget. Three servers and a switch would probably be the bare minimum. We (and I'm sure Oxide :) scale up like a dream.

grappler · 2 years ago
This all has me wondering, if I just want to play with stuff in this space as an individual homelabber who earns a tech salary and wants a nicely designed rack-mounted alternative to a mess of unorganized NUCs and cables and whatnot, what are my best options?
grappler commented on Unlimited Kagi searches for $10 per month   blog.kagi.com/unlimited-s... · Posted by u/darthShadow
umvi · 2 years ago
grappler · 2 years ago
thanks, that's a good answer, and more nuanced than I'd realized things had gotten in this space
grappler commented on Unlimited Kagi searches for $10 per month   blog.kagi.com/unlimited-s... · Posted by u/darthShadow
grappler · 2 years ago
I recall hearing that Google and Bing have a nearly insurmountable lead in terms of raw ability to index the web, and that all other "alternative" search engines are using Google and/or Bing under the hood. Is this the case for Kagi? Or is Kagi actually maintaining and drawing upon their own independent index?
grappler commented on Kubernetes Removals and Major Changes in v1.27   kubernetes.io/blog/2023/0... · Posted by u/mikece
rektide · 3 years ago
So there is nothing new slated for 1.27? It's only removing deprecated old stuff?
grappler · 3 years ago
1.27 hasn't been released yet.

Looking back at the previous release, 1.26, for comparison, we have this post, published a few weeks before 1.26 was released:

    https://kubernetes.io/blog/2022/11/18/upcoming-changes-in-kubernetes-1-26/
The release announcement, made on the day of the 1.26 release, highlighted the new stuff:

    https://kubernetes.io/blog/2022/12/09/kubernetes-v1-26-release/

grappler commented on Hedge funds are offering to buy startups deposits stuck at Silicon Valley Bank   semafor.com/article/03/11... · Posted by u/colesantiago
muzz · 3 years ago
If hedge funds are willing to pay up to 80 cents on the dollar, it implies they think they'll be able to recover more than that.
grappler · 3 years ago
According to this article, 80 is the upper end of bids they're reporting; the lower end is 60 cents on the dollar.

u/grappler

KarmaCake day2973August 23, 2011View Original