I joined Lemmy back in 2020 and have been using it as @[email protected] until somewhere in 2023 when I switched to lemmy.world. I’m interested in systemd/Linux, FOSS, and Selfhosting.
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qaz@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•GitHub - minio/minio: "This repository was archived by the owner on Apr 25, 2026. It is now read-only."English
2·19 hours agoobject_store does indeed also support WebDAV among a variety of other protocols, Apache Druid or Apache Pinot probably would be better examples. My only experience with WebDAV is with Nextcloud and hasn’t been that great because it has been very slow, probably should look into it sometime.
EDIT: Apparently it supports CAS, and even has a locking mechanism
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•GitHub - minio/minio: "This repository was archived by the owner on Apr 25, 2026. It is now read-only."English
3·19 hours agoScaleway, Exoscale, Cyso, Contabo, UpCloud, and others too
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•GitHub - minio/minio: "This repository was archived by the owner on Apr 25, 2026. It is now read-only."English
1·20 hours agoMany cloud providers offer S3-compatible storage, so it’s a common protocol to use in applications. There are even some databases like SlateDB that fully rely on object storage for everything. Supporting more API’s is extra work (unless you’re using OpenDAL) so most people pick S3 compatible API’s because they’re the most widely supported across all cloud platforms.
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•GitHub - minio/minio: "This repository was archived by the owner on Apr 25, 2026. It is now read-only."English
2·20 hours agoS3 isn’t just an AWS thing anymore. It has kind of become the standard object storage protocol, and almost every cloud provider uses it aside from a few the made their own API’s (e.g. Azure Blob storage)
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•GitHub - minio/minio: "This repository was archived by the owner on Apr 25, 2026. It is now read-only."English
13·20 hours agoMany cloud providers offer S3-compatible storage, so it’s a common protocol to use in applications. There are even some databases like SlateDB that fully rely on object storage for everything. Being able to have local S3 compatible storage is useful if you want the storage of your local machine while still doing so over a widely compatible protocol.
I tried that and my account got randomly deleted
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•DeepSeek ditches Nvidia for Huawei chips in V4 launchEnglish
4·1 day agoI don’t think they only run on these chips. There are some companies in the US that provide Deepseek V4 presumably running on standard Nvidia chips.
Of zelfs daarvoor, er waren bij ons ook veel bedrijven die studenten probeerden te overtuigen om te stoppen met de studie en gelijk bij hun te gaan werken.
qaz@lemmy.worldtoik_ihe@feddit.nl•Ik⚡ihe: Even Tot Hier weet de oplossing tot netcongestieEnglish
3·2 days agoLeuk dat ze deze keer geen AI lijken te hebben gebruikt
There is Cockpit which allows you to manage the server and has simple management for containers. However, I recommend using something like Dockge with compose because it makes it easier to change the configuration of containers without recreating them manually.
And podman runsias user, not as root.
Both Podman and Docker have rootfull and rootless options
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•At some point AI companies are going to have to charge real money to make a profit from their services. What do you think that amount would be and why?English
1·2 days agoCompanies like Claude with their AI subscriptions might be losing money, but I doubt paid-per-token AI API usage is not making them money. There are several companies like e.g. DeepInfra and Fireworks that have sprung up to sell specifically that. I don’t think simply multiplying API cost with expected usage is sufficient to estimate how much will be charged however, because I suspect that OpenAI and Claude currently have a significant profit margin since they seem to be the defacto duopoly in the US.

The chart above shows that quite clearly, the vertical axis is the combined score on various benchmarks. The horizontal axis shows the price. OpenAI and Claude do score higher, but the price difference is enormous, even if it wasn’t a log scale (70$ vs 1.3k$ for similar results!). The competition of these companies could drastically reduce the margins of US companies,
I therefore think the pricing will depend on whether the large US AI companies manage to lobby the government to enact laws to cripple the competition of Chinese companies under the guise of security.
Been there and got 6 messages from my carrier telling me I was entering another country
qaz@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Singaporean man executed for importing cannabisEnglish
71·6 days agoNot everyone on the internet lives in the US
qaz@lemmy.worldOPMto
Videos@lemmy.world•[Contains AI] Making RAM at Home | Dr. SemiconductorEnglish
22·6 days agoI’ve been looking through the previous video and while it’s clear that AI is used (like in the transition of the shed). The rest seems to be too consistent to be entirely AI generated, details of objects remain consistent across shots. The short time-lapse also seems hard to fake. The new video doesn’t seem to be using AI as much, but I did spot this illustration that seems generated. The video also references the projectsinflight channel which leads me to believe it’s not based on an LLM generated script and the author does understand what he is talking about.
If it was a fake I can see why someone would do that. The Patreon brings in €285.6/month, coming from 140 people. His voice is also very monotone so I can see why you feel it’s suspicious.
qaz@lemmy.worldto
You Should Know@lemmy.world•If you use a VPN that support Wireguard configs(like ProtonVPN or Mullvad) you can use Wireguard official client to connect in the most efficient and secure way instead of the VPN provider clientEnglish
2·8 days agoYes that was what I was referring to. I suspect it was meant as some kind of marketing stunt. There are some interesting comments about this on one of the Dutch subreddits.
qaz@lemmy.worldto
You Should Know@lemmy.world•If you use a VPN that support Wireguard configs(like ProtonVPN or Mullvad) you can use Wireguard official client to connect in the most efficient and secure way instead of the VPN provider clientEnglish
11·9 days agoWasn’t Windscribe the provider that lied about a server getting seized without a warrant?
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Assuming reliability is the priority I would suggest going with Tailscale Funnels or a cheap VPS acting as intermediary.
I don’t have a lot of experience with dealing with GCNAT, but perhaps you could look into some solution with UPnP or RFC 6887.