ProperlyProperTea
@ProperlyProperTea@lemmy.ml
- Comment on Which game would you erase from your memory, in order to experience it fresh once again? 5 days ago:
Well, ::: spoiler Replaying as thr story as 9s can get pretty slow, and the combat isn’t nearly as enjoyable. spoiler:::
Other than that, yes, it’s still my favorite game. The ending hit me so hard; had me messed up for a while. I just started Clair Obscure: Expedition 33 in hopes of having a game hit me as hard as Nier: Automata did.
- Comment on Home maintenance tracker? 1 week ago:
Not home specific, but maybe Vikunja? It lets you have projects, and tasks due within those projects. I think its more tailored toward teams working on projecgaprojects though.
- Comment on anyone have a sheet music system/workflow that works? 1 week ago:
Are you looking to obtain sheet music, or scan in your existing sheet music?
- Comment on Selfhost an LLM 1 week ago:
Indeed, other than being able to get the model running, having decent hardware is the next most important part.
3060 12gb is probably cheapest card to get, 3090 or other 24gb card if you can get it
- Comment on Looking for recommendation to upgrade my Raspberry Pi-based home server 1 week ago:
I find Lenovo makes the best ones in terms of expandability. Full size PCI-e is crazy on their ThinkCentres
- Comment on [NAS] Onboard vs HBA vs SATA expansion cards 2 weeks ago:
There’s a youtuber that goes by the name Wolfgang’s Channel. He’s basically got a series on making on making efficient NAS’s.
Basically, in terms of watts consumed, it’s better to not have an HBA card installed since they can prevent the system from preventing lower C states when idle. Thus having a board with more SATA ports is better since you won’t need an HBA card.
Here’s a link to known power efficient setups.
If you still want to go the add in route, I think the consensus is that SATA add in cards aren’t as reliable as HBA cards, but HBA cards are more power hungry. Here’s a link to HBA add in cards’ power consumption.
Also, if you have HDDs, 5400 rpm drives consume less power than 7200 rpm drives.
At a certain point you’re spending more money than you save in your power bill, but I can’t deny that its fun making your build as efficient as possible.
- Comment on Self hosted calendar 5 weeks ago:
I tried both and for some reason Baikal just played nicer. I’m sure either is fine though.
Nextcloud was too bulky for my needs.