Techie, software developer, hobbyist photographer, sci-fi/fantasy & comics fan in the Los Angeles area. He/him.

Main: @kelson@notes.kvibber.com
Website: KVibber.com #IndieWeb

Moved from KelsonV@lemmy.ml

  • 13 Posts
  • 26 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 11th, 2023

help-circle

    • Dropped Reddit and Twitter completely. Actually deleted my Reddit account and deleted most of my Twitter history.
    • Stopped using Gmail as my primary email.
    • Went back to DVD and Blu-Ray for shows and movies I think I might want to rewatch.
    • Slowly importing stuff I’ve posted on various social media to my website.
    • Slowly moving stuff off of Google Drive and Dropbox to my local PC and/or Nextcloud.
    • Finally set up my Nextcloud server to use object storage so I can use it for auto-uploads without worrying about space.
    • Tried out a bunch of different Fediverse platforms.
    • Made more of an effort to report bugs instead of just living with them or using something else.
    • Deleted Chrome as my secondary browser and installed Vivaldi. (I’ve been using Firefox as my primary for a while.)

    Moving stuff is slow because I don’t want to just copy it all over, I want to decide what to keep in the process.









  • I have a single Raspberry Pi 3b as a local file/media server running Jellyfin. I’m also running BOINC and seeding torrents of various Linux distributions. External HDD for storage, plus a thumb drive for the local media and another for the torrents so it only has to spin up when someone’s actually using it.

    It’s not super-fast by any means, but it’s fast enough to listen to music over my LAN, which is the main thing I need it to do quickly. Though eventually I plan on setting up a better NAS on something with faster I/O.














  • KDE Plasma handles the touch screen fine on my PineTab2.

    It works in LxQt too, but only in portrait mode (which is the default for this device). I keep meaning to look up how to tell it to rotate the touch coordinates along with the display, and I keep not getting around to it.

    But the main issue I’ve run into is that most GUI apps for Linux are…let’s just say they’re not designed with touch input in mind.







  • I used names of fictional robots, androids and self-aware computers (though I avoided HAL for obvious reasons) for a long time. These days my wife and I usually go with an indirect reference to the function or hardware - Ex. a device named Anathema, or a Raspberry Pi server named Marie (as in Marie Callendar, a former local pie/restaurant chain). I had an expendable frankenputer for tinkering that I called RedShirt.

    Currently trying to come up with a name other than Chris for the PineTab 2.

    Edit to add: Places I’ve worked have used Roman emperors, drink brands, Simpsons characters, and of course basics like “IIS1” “MAIL4” “QA-3” and so on. Some would add numbers to the names sequentially, others would use the last octet of the IP address.