

A couple million posts isn’t much?
A couple million posts isn’t much?
Therefore to comply, the server would relocate or go offline.
I specifically said linear and not flat because it is a non-exponential increase.
You could say the rate of posts is flat, but the data series is posts, not rate of posts.
It’s just a byproduct of our calendar.
https://lemmy.fediverse.observer/stats
Total posts by month appears fairly linear.
Intel’s current corporate nonsense doesn’t affect the quality of existing products. They will continue to be supported under Linux and BSD for a long time.
Dell is not linux-first, but they do officially support Ubuntu for some models.
If you pass a whole raw disk, not virtualized, then TrueNAS should not complain. I don’t know if you can do that in proxmox, I haven’t tried.
Personally I’d get rid of TrueNAS. Even if docker is down, the VM with the data is still up and accessible over anything running on the VM, like scp via ssh.
Nobody reads the articles.
It should include pipelines too.
You have to click through the reddit link to find the “original”, which is a perplexity AI generated “article”. It’s all AI slop.
It sounds like there’s been some change since that happened. I would review the current terms and GPLv3, if that’s the one you want to use.
Windows and Linux can mount ISOs without additional software. Macs can mount DMGs.
Either way, you could preload that software before the file.
*efficiency
Memtest? Boot a live image and stress test each component?
I don’t think it’s overheating, usually that presents as throttling followed by a thermal protection power off.
Well it’s not open source that I see, so you’ll be doing significant development to match it. There are probably place clones that you can use as a start, then tie in OSM. But that’s far easier said than done.
If you’re adding drives with more capacity, why bother converting? Just create the new one, copy the data, then expand over the old disks.
Have backups for anything you can’t afford to lose, and be patient.
Devuan is Debian with sysv.