oh man… I’m such a dumb dumb … didn’t even try 10.3.0, now I did and the docker version works and is extremely fast, compared to a CPU… Thank you so much.
Developer by day, gamer by night!
🖥️ Stack: #NodeJS #Flutter #Go
🐧Linux: Currently on #Fedora
🎮️ Games: #ApexLegends and #Chess
Fun fact: Built my own custom keyboard, which sometimes doesn’t work and hangs, but hey… it still adds to the charm, right 😂
oh man… I’m such a dumb dumb … didn’t even try 10.3.0, now I did and the docker version works and is extremely fast, compared to a CPU… Thank you so much.
It would the first scenario you described… i’d just interact with a chatbot occasionally like I do with chatgpt now…but I’d also like to try to experiment with copilot like models to test and use with vscode. So no training of models or 24/7 batch operations.
I was wondering whether a custom built gaming PC is the only solution here or if there are other cjeaper alternatives that get the job decently done
I have the exact same gpu and tried that. But couldn’t get ollama docker version (rocm) to work with the gpu. even changing the env variable to 10.30.1. (rocminfo reports gfx1031)
would you mind giving some instructions or a link?
Yeah, I’ve already heard about such a solution, where I’d need a Pi that acts as the streaming client, which then should work with any camera.
can these be configured to stream TO a remote frigate server?
Example: I’d like to install one at my parent’s house, connect it to my parent’s wifi, but have it stream to frigate, that’s hosted on my server in another city?
I think this part should be better left off to the actual tool that does a more promising job on security, like a firewall.
Lol… that’s exactly what I use, the left part of the launcher.
Sure, but I was talking about the basic concept of how things work in general to keep it simple for OP.
in a nutshell
This is how the control and information exchange of smart devices work:
Phone App -> [Server] … [Server] -> Smart Device and vice versa
There’s no way around this concept.
Now, Google gives you the phone app and the (public) server part. but these only work with their servers and apps, keeping you locked in.
HA gives you the same, a server and an app, but allows you to keep the server private (access via vpn for public)
Also who guarantees that Google Home will be there in the next few years? HA will still keep running even if it ever gets abandoned.
Authelia is meant to be an SSO (like Google). In order to use it, you have to create users (and passwords) within the authelia yaml file, or connect it to light-ldap and do it via ldaps web gui.
You probably have other services running, i.e. immich, etc. These can be configured to use auhelias OIDC to authenticate the user against. you’d still need to create the users within the service, since I doubt they get auto-created.
Now, you can decide for yourself, whether to put your bitwarden behind authelia or not, and I’m not sure how the mobile apps work in this sense, if at all.
If you decide to do so, you just give your users their authelia/lightldap creds, if not, you additionally have to give them their bitwarden creds.
At this point they just might contribute to kbin then. If they know Java, they probably know PHP too, or at least it’d be easier to pick up.
Yes! It should work :-D
Regarding enriching MB. Honestly, I don’t have time for that.
I’m from one of the slavic countries and there are so many missing albums, it’d take me a lifetime to contribute.
I haven’t had much success with the arr-scripts, whereas with the lidarr:plugins + deemix I had.
I did not test it, but It should work, since it only pulls the albums, and is not involved in the download process at all.
Oh, and checks for existing ones, so there are no duplicates.
I’d argue that it certainly isn’t. Possibly the previous owner ran it under heavy loads, constantly, resulting in a degrading of the components.
Or they themselves were unfortunate to receive a faulty unit that started to misbehave randomly, and are now selling it after the warranty period.
yes, and that consistency is not guaranteed on the second-gand market either.
I’m sure if I dig deep enough, I might find threads like these for any hardware.
Just look at Apple. Their MacBook lineup has been a mess since 2016, and they are a “reputable” and overpriced non-aliexpress company.
And yes, you’re fucked if you buy something from Ali and it turns out faulty. But you’re also fucked if you buy second-hand. The risk of loss is equal.
You’re comparing apples to oranges here and this has literally nothing to do with the hardware that was mentioned in this thread. They all have soldered mobile CPUs. The N100, N305, 4700u, etc.
I haven’t updated bios on my main pc ever since I built it… so I think the concerns you’re talking about are more hit than miss.
As a non english-native… the title confused the hell out of me… had to read it like 5 times and still makes no sense