

Eh, that looks like typical take home for a staff level engineer in a big city.


Eh, that looks like typical take home for a staff level engineer in a big city.


I recently did a big expansion on my home networking infrastructure, and backups were one of bigger triggers.
My setup is based on a local NAS + Hetzner storage box. The NAS runs Immich, Paperless, and the arr stack. Immich and Paperless back up to the storage box via borg, along with the configuration and docker files, but not the media. I either have physical copies of that or don’t really care because I can just download it again.
My computers also back up to the storage box via borg, except for the Photos, Music and Video directories, for the same reasons. My partners Mac is currently backing up to an external USB drive, but the plan is to move them to Backblaze for the easy SAF and/or the NAS as a Timemachine target.


Plausible? Absolutely. The questions are what and why?
For notes, it seems like most people have settled on one of three things: org-mode, markdown, or free form plain text. There are some closed source tools that use a proprietary format, but fuck them.
So then the question becomes what does the backend do? Provide a way to query notes for links, topics, and todos? Keep a versioning system? Synchonization? Something else? Answer those questions and you have a project.
For references, take a look at nb, Joplin, Logseq, org-mode, anytype.


For consumer hardware supported by stock kernels? No advantage at all. At most you may want to switch kernels, but most distros have a handy tool for that.
The only time I’ve compiled my own kernel in the last 15 years has been for work on very specialized embedded systems.


There are dozens of us!


Helix when I can install things, vi when I can’t.
What do you think Project Support is?