Introducing gwt
After working on it for a bit, and convincing a coworker to use it and provide feedback, I’ve finally made gwt an actual thing. I expect no one will actually use it, but whatever, it’s up for the world to critique.
read moreAfter working on it for a bit, and convincing a coworker to use it and provide feedback, I’ve finally made gwt an actual thing. I expect no one will actually use it, but whatever, it’s up for the world to critique.
read moreDNS is one of those thing most people never think about. It’s one of those things in the background that quietly does its job and no one pays it no mind. Which is why it’s surprising to people when they discover that if their DNS traffic can be logged, a very informative picture of them can be created.
read moreOne of the reasons that I find myself going back to Gentoo is that you compile the entire system for your hardware which, in theory, leads to the best performance possible. So the first task that I undertook when switching the NUC over to it was to figure out what compile options ClearLinux uses. Once I had figured those settings out, I then decided to use LTO optimization for all packages that support it. However, I didn’t want to use the LTO overlay.
read moreI posted a year ago about dropping ClearLinux and switching to Ubuntu Server on my NUC. While that little experiment was fun, it didn’t last long. I’m not entirely sure what it is about my brain/personality, but I just do not like any of the binary Linux distros out there for my own long-term use so I went back to my old friend, Gentoo.
read moreAs mentioned (very) briefly in other posts, I run Home Assistant as the ‘control hub’ for all my “smart” devices in my home. I originally ran it via their ‘HASSOS’ Docker image but was never really happy with it. So when I most recently rebuilt my NUC, I decided to give this Podman thing a look. And so far, I seem to like it better. I’m still not entirely sold on this whole container bullshit, but whatever ;)
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