

Did they kick it in? Yes I’m still bitter about it, why do you ask?
Did they kick it in? Yes I’m still bitter about it, why do you ask?
Wait, do people actually say that as “is bin” rather than “eye ess bee en”?
I watched this from the UK. Midnight start, figured I’d at least watch the first period and see how it goes. All ready to pack it in with 5 mins left in the third but figured I’d stuck it out this long so I may as well see it to the end.
Absolutely insane when they tied it, and then of course I was up until after 4am and got to bed just in time for the birds to start chirping outside. I’m paying the price now but it was so worth it.
Just a PSA for anybody reading the thread, though it doesn’t really help with the question at hand… On the very slim chance that your workplace uses Bitwarden Enterprise it’s worth knowing that every licensed user gets a free family plan that can be tied to an existing personal account, provided it’s hosted in the same region.
We do use it but very few of our own users are even aware of the perk so I like to spread it around when I get the chance!
Ha, I’ve only ever watched one episode of Always Sunny and it just happened to be this one. How convenient for me!
I skim read the changelogs for breaking changes but mostly just YOLO it whenever I’m in the mood to update or a new monthly release drops.
That said, the VM that runs HAOS and the Z2M addon is snapshotted every night with two week’s worth of retention, and I let HA do its own scheduled backups in case a snapshot restore doesn’t work for whatever reason. So far I’ve never had a need for either but I rest easy knowing the options are there.
I lived in Australia for a few years and this baffled me for the longest time. I kept missing deliveries even though I was home, and it was only when I queried it with the local post office that they told me that the posties don’t even bother carrying parcels around. They just leave them at the post office and card everyone as standard.
This isn’t a Valve thing, its a USA thing
Good point. I was going to say that Valve could voluntarily offer a better warranty but isn’t the standard in the US something like 90 days? Insanity.
Still, they could choose to match globally what they have to offer here, which is 2 years.
I’m sorry that you’re getting less than sympathetic replies here. I don’t know what the original was since you’ve edited the post and I don’t have anything constructive to add as I assume you’re in the US, but in the EU/UK goods have to last “a reasonable amount of time” regardless of the warranty term.
Some cheap plastic tat might reasonably be expected to last a few months, a washing machine maybe 10 years provided it’s not misused. The further out you get from the warranty period, the more the onus is on the customer to prove it’s a manufacturing defect, and the less you can expect in monetary compensation.
For a high value item like a computer, TV, or the Steam Deck no reasonable person would consider it a good run, shrug their shoulders, and rush out to buy a new one when it unceremoniously died 4 months outside of the warranty period. If that happened to me in the UK I’d be throwing the consumer rights book at them.
Sorry, I know none of that helps if you’re not in the EU/UK, but contrary to what other are saying I don’t think you’re being unreasonable in complaining at all.
It’s an 8 bay unit with six drives that are a mix of WD Red and Seagate Ironwolf, all NAS grade drives, basically. The other two slots have SSDs for hosting the aforementioned containers and VMs.
The largest drives I have are 4TB though, so maybe the larger capacity ones are louder? I also ran the fan profile in whatever the quietest setting is.
I am a tech oriented person, I work in IT, and a Syno ticks the boxes in many respects.
Low power draw. Power efficiency is very important to me, especially for something that runs 24/7. I don’t know how efficient self-build options are these days, but 10 years ago I couldn’t get close to the efficiency of a good NAS.
Set and forget. I maintain enough systems at work so I don’t really want to spend all of my free time maintaining my own. A Syno “just works”, it can run for months or years without a reboot (and when it does need one, it does it by itself overnight), and I can easily upgrade or swap a dead drive in a couple of minutes. When the entire NAS dies I can stick the drives in a new one and be up and running almost instantly.
Size and noise. I don’t have a massive house, so I need something that can sit on a shelf and be unobtrusive. In our last house it was literally sat in the living room, spinning drives constantly, and nobody was bothered by it.
The Syno I have is plenty good enough to run a bunch of Docker containers and a few VMs for all of my self hosted stuff, and it just does the job efficiently, quietly, and without complaining or needing constant maintenance.
I don’t like this creep towards requiring branded drives and memory, though I’m pretty sure it’s not legal in the EU. Regardless there are ways around it.
I have that Beelink and while I don’t run Home Assistant on it (I run that from a VM on my NAS) , it does run a whole bunch of stuff, including Plex, and it’s more than capable.
I think you have a couple of options here:
Run HAOS on the bare metal and use Home Assistant addons to add the other functionality you want. Addons are HA managed Docker containers and there’s lots of them out there, including Plex. What I don’t know is whether you can access hardware acceleration this way, which you can do via regular Docker (see below).
Install something like Unraid, Proxmox or whatever flavour of Linux you prefer - literally anything that supports full blown VMs and Docker at the same time. Install HAOS in a VM and use Docker for everything else. Passthrough /dev/dri to any Docker containers that use hardware acceleration (Plex) and you’re golden.
It’s a great little box. Enjoy!
Right? The next first time we see this it better have those eyes!
Carrying anything other than a small folding knife without good reason is illegal in the UK, it’s as simple as that. “It’s for self defense” does not count as a good reason and will get you in deeper trouble as you’re basically admitting to being willing to stab someone who “threatens” you.
If you own a domain, which you do, you can get wildcard certs from Let’s Encrypt using a DNS challenge. Most (all?) popular reverse proxies can do this either natively or via an addon/module, you just need to use a supported DNS provider.
Everybody ITT talking about dashboards when the real killer feature is global variables within automations.
This is the tune that got me into both drum & bass and edm as a whole. Such a beautiful journey.
Had to scroll way too far to find this. For Karl!
As a Jets fan I’m too busy wallowing in my own self pity to feel sorry for you guys, though I am disappointed that there’s no longer any chance of an all Canadian final.
Go Oilers I guess.