• bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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    1 year ago

    Reddit and Twitter are multimillion dollar enterprises

    I’m just some fool who rents a little virtual server so I can help people use the fediverse

    I mean I’m not even an IT guy by trade (just by hobby) - I’m a truck driver.

    • SmoothSurfer@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I cannot express my appreciation, and dude I assure you, you got bigger balls than elon’s chest

    • joyjoy@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It’s a good thing it’s a virtual server. I can’t imagine the issues you would have if you hosted it from the back of your truck.

        • jaschen@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          You’re in the wrong field, my man. I sit at a chair 60 hours a week staring into a empty void that is my monitor. Wait, maybe we are not really that different after all.

          • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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            1 year ago

            I just really don’t know how to get in, while living in central Florida, with no degree, while not taking a pay cut which I can’t afford as the sole earner in my household :/

            • thefury@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              If you’re thinking about shifting careers, I’ve been there. I started as a self-learner with no degree, before the ease of joining a freelance service was a thing. My starting point was a small firm where I did tech support for the coders. I got involved in automation projects and gradually built trust by proving I could deliver what I promised.

              I think that the core principles I learned remain valid today: Learn by doing projects, learn in public, and be patient.

              If I was starting again, and if I didn’t have a job next to the right people, I’d probably do the following. Start with creating useful projects. Treat these as opportunities to learn and simulate real job conditions. If your work involves coding, share it on GitHub. If it’s about building infrastructure, treat it as Infrastructure as Code and share it on GitHub. If it’s not code-related, or even if it is, document your work and what you’ve learned on a blog.

              Regardless of your project’s nature, make sure to record your learnings and pass on your knowledge. It helps reinforce your understanding and it gives you something to point to during interviews.

              • nosurf@unilem.org
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                1 year ago

                With that said, i think it is the hardest it has ever been in this industry to get a job in tech. If im being honest i think a lot of these stories are giving false hope at this point. It may turn around, but right now its tough out here

    • Rick@thesimplecorner.org
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      1 year ago

      I am an it guy and mine still goes down… Lol. Your doing great to get an instance going! That setup isn’t exactly non tech friendly.

      Mine went down yesterday because my backup job for my docker vols filled up my entire vps.

      • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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        1 year ago

        I was starting to run into that until I moved pict-rs to object storage a few days back.

        I gzip the backups, keep one local, upload the rest to Backblaze. The local one gets deleted before the next backup starts.

          • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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            1 year ago

            For the backups I have these bash scripts (the pict-rs one takes much less time now that I use object storage so the images aren’t on the server): https://gist.github.com/bdonvr/5d4e56dadcb29de656368a1cb78cc00e

            You can look at rclone’s docs on how to hook that into B2 (or wherever you’d like to dump your backups, B2 is jusut cheap). I also set up a crypt in rclone so it encrypts it as it uploads (optional).

            Then just put those on cron jobs at different times, I do them every 6 hours. One at <hour>:15 and one at <hour>:45

            Then in B2 I set the bucket to keep files for 10 days.

            To migrate to object storage check pict-rs docs here: https://git.asonix.dog/asonix/pict-rs.git#user-content-filesystem-to-object-storage-migration

            Took about 20 minutes for me with 30gb of files, but your instance has to be down for it. I use Cloudflare R2 for pict-rs.

            • Rick@thesimplecorner.org
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              1 year ago

              Thank you very much. Seriously, that lays it all out perfectly. I was looking at the pict-rs docs for how to switch but then work called… so I really appreciate you taking the time to do this. 🙌 🍾 🎉 🥂

              • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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                1 year ago

                No problem

                Oh and for those scripts the user needs paswordless sudo and needs to be part of the docker group, or you could add it to root’s cron tab. Or maybe a systemd task. (Since the default ansible deploy of lemmy makes the pict-rs volume not readable by a normal system user)

  • manitcor@lemmy.intai.tech
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    1 year ago

    one of these is making a profit off of you, the other is a community tended commons. there is no comparison.

  • AllonzeeLV@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It isn’t double standards, it’s patience for a fledgling replacement platform that seeks to free you from being a commodity to be exploited and sold, and lack of patience for the established, exclusively profit hungry platforms that continue to make your experience worse and disrespect you, solely to squeeze a few extra pennies out of you to meet insatiable, unquenchable growth/metastasis expectations.

    It’s the difference between yelling at a professional pickpocket trying to rob you and a kid who is screwing up trying to help you. Resources matter, but more importantly, motivations matter.

    • Wats0ns@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      1 year ago

      I DO assume to have double standards. Of course they’re not the same for the nonprofit that’s trying to protect my privacy than for the company that’s trying to sell it

  • Scraft161@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    1 year ago

    A big part of the fediverse is that it’s decentralized, one server going down doesn’t mean you can’t see anything, the rest of the network still exists and there are still people using that.

      • Scraft161@iusearchlinux.fyi
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        1 year ago

        I follow quite a few communities across the lemmyverse so it’s not too big of a deal, but I do know that it’s a very large and popular instance (then again, my advice has always been to settle on a smaller instance anyways)

    • henfredemars@lemdro.id
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      1 year ago

      If an instance is just being slow I’ll hop on to one of my other accounts, let alone down. My client makes that easy to do.

      User-driven load balancing!

  • NotSteve_@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    It makes sense! Lemmy servers are new and still gaining stability. You’re also not paying (not even with your data) so you can be more forgiving