From experience shipping releases, “bigger updates” and “more tested” are more or less antithetical. The testing surface area tends to grow exponentially with the amount of features you ship with a given release, to the point I tend to see small, regular releases, as a better sign of stability.
folkrav
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That’s not “self hosting” related tho lol
I answered to another comment with some details, but long story short, it tends to be the kind of thing you don’t think about until it’s causing you problems in the first place. I never thought about any of this either until the pain started ~8 years ago. I have nerve pain in both elbows that shoot down to my ring finger and pinky, and up to the shoulder if it gets really bad - that is, if I’m not careful, like typing scrunched over a laptop in a meeting room all day… Using a split keyboard alone fixed like 90% of the problem, the rest is controlled with stretches and PT exercises, minding my posture, taking breaks, etc.
I went down the ergonomics route from sheer necessity more than anything. I have ulnar nerve issues in both elbows, meaning my hands and fingers end up tingling, then hurting for days if I’m not careful. I have pretty broad shoulders (used to play on the offensive line in american football) and very large hands, meaning “regular” non-split keyboards inherently create a lot of tension in my wrists and elbows due to the sheer angle I have to maintain. I use a split board just so I can reduce wrist pronation by keeping my arms at shoulder width and having some tenting.
However, I have to say, “large” split boards, like this one or my Iris l, aren’t nearly as weird to use as they look. For the most part, until you have some fancy mappings going on, all that’s different by default is having some modifiers and common special keys right under your thumbs instead of weak fingers or positions (pinkies or having to reach under your palm). Those tiny 3-4 row boards that need 3-4 layers just to be usable are IMHO another game entirely haha.
That other guy seems to think so
The split keyboard part is incredible for ergonomics. So comfy to just put your hands on my desk at shoulder width and just have my keyboard right there. The trackball I sold, though, came back to a Deathadder… How scary am I?
It was self-fulfilling for me. I started self-hosting and messing with networking before I went into IT. I thought I’d be in a very different field until ~10 years ago.
folkrav@lemmy.cato
ErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.world•[Discussion thread] Did you solder your keyboard yourself or did you get it prebuilt?
2·1 year agoI soldered a Planck kit, then an Iris v2 kit, then bought a recent Iris with hot swap and all that jazz when the first started acting up and I couldn’t figure out why.
I want to start actually making stuff - really interested in a Dactyl-like contoured board - and I have most of the stuff I would need for the electronics side of things, maybe upgrade the cheap soldering iron. The one thing holding me back is cases. With kids and a dog, I’m honestly not too interested in leaving bare electronics sitting on my desk. I want a pretty case too, and that mostly means 3D printing. I never had any room for a printer, and online printing costs were pretty prohibitive in my area last I checked.
folkrav@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Should I use a reverse proxy in a homelab?English
2·1 year agoI’m curious what made it that complicated. Was the Synology OS (DSM they call it right?) fighting you along every step or something? As far as I know it’s a custom Linux OS but I have no idea what it’s based on, or if it’s even based on a specific distribution… I could definitely see it being a challenge depending on the answers haha.
folkrav@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Next up in the Proxmox adventures: Why does my Rx590 show up as an RTX 2070 and how do I fix it?English
5·2 years agoEh, I just generally avoid Nvidia on Linux hosts unless I specifically need it. Their driver situation is better than it was, but still sucks.
Pretty much the only thing I use Tailscale for is remotely SSHing from my phone to my home NAS, and they definitely don’t manage my keys. They do have a “Tailscale SSH” feature I don’t use…
folkrav@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Next up in the Proxmox adventures: Why does my Rx590 show up as an RTX 2070 and how do I fix it?English
11·2 years agoIf it wasn’t that it’s Nvidia and that you bought this specifically for Linux, I’d have told you to keep the Nvidia, as you did get a significantly better card for the price you paid.
folkrav@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Pi.Alert is dead...💀 Long live NetAlert X 🚀 (network monitoring)English
2·2 years agoNaming is really hard, I can’t blame you haha. I never had to name public facing things, at work I usually advocate for either really straightforward descriptive names or just having fun on a theme (e.g. we had classical music based stuff at one place, like Orchestra, Sonata, Symphony, and pop culture/nerdy stuff at another like Marvel heroes or SW characters, etc). Coming up with a name that’s marketable, discoverable and searchable sounds like a nightmare lol
folkrav@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Pi.Alert is dead...💀 Long live NetAlert X 🚀 (network monitoring)English
23·2 years agoThe practice of calling a product “FooBar X”, unless it’s literally your version 10 that you just happen to be marketing in Roman numerals, feels a bit like those businesses that named themselves “Plumbing 2000”, it’s a bit tacky and doesn’t tend to age well IMHO. But hey, it’s not like it’d be the first software with a slightly kitsch name I use either lol
folkrav@lemmy.cato
Fediverse@lemmy.world•President Biden is now posting into the fediverseEnglish
21·2 years agoEh, from what I could gather from both specs ATProto does address some shortcomings of ActivityPub, so the idea has some technical merit. While a lot of the current Fediverse seems to have settled on AP, it’s not like it’s the be-all and end-all of federated protocols either.
Maybe you’re just talking about the company behind it?
folkrav@lemmy.cato
Fediverse@lemmy.world•President Biden is now posting into the fediverseEnglish
283·2 years agoI’d rather have them on Bluesky/AT than Threads, to be perfectly honest…
Yeah, I’m no graphic designer but the fediverse logo looks like a nightmare to render at small sizes, which is what designers are looking for in a logo, typically - something that is easy to recognize, tells something about the product, and scales well at all sizes, from favicon to building sized ad. I like that it conveys its own meaning really well, but it’s also extremely busy. So many crossing lines in such a small space just looks like a garbled mess at small sizes. Take this image and scale it down to 16x16px, you can see what I mean.
folkrav@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•New Unraid OS License Pricing, Timeline, and FAQsEnglish
3·2 years agoThere are cheap NASes/home servers to be bought/built for a couple hundred bucks, with very limited RAM, while TrueNAS recommends 8GB minimum. It’s also often much cheaper to have the option to buy mismatched drives on sale and expand your storage over time, than having to buy matched drives, and having to plan long term for potential expansion of else have to replace a whole set of drives at once if you need more. But fair enough, yes.
folkrav@lemmy.cato
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•New Unraid OS License Pricing, Timeline, and FAQsEnglish
21·2 years agoThe incentive is still there, it just presents itself differently. Nothing prevents them from withholding major changes so they happen every 13 months either. If anything, I would at least expect yearly major versions to have large changes, while they can technically do whatever they want during the year I pay for, including not pushing any updates whatsoever.
If your software is following semver, not necessarily. It only requires a major version bump if a change is breaking backwards compatibility. You can have very big minor releases and tiny major releases.
Again, by experience, this is assuming a lot.