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what is the current recommendation for a simple home NAS?
  • Another vote for Synology here. I previously had a DS418play for almost 8 years. Just picked up a DS423+ recently to upgrade and the process was literally as simple as removing the drives from the old NAS, chucking them in the new NAS, and booting up. All my Docker containers, all my credentials, all my licenses were all just there and working, despite being in a new shell.

  • what is the current recommendation for a simple home NAS?
  • Also want to call out the importance of 4-bay vs. 2-bay. With 2-bay you get 1-drive fault tolerance in RAID mode, which is nice. With 4-bay, you can still opt for 1-drive fault tolerance and with SHR you can have 4 drives active (of varying sizes) giving you much more available space and making the upgrade path of storage significantly easier.

  • [Game] Recommendations for factory games
    • Nova Lands just came out and has native controller support. Works very well, even if it's somewhat simplistic.
    • Factorio just released controller support which works well most of the time but it's kinda fiddly.

    Also, beware that DSP does not support cloud saves because the devs can't compress their save data enough to fit in the Steam cloud requirements.

  • controller that isn't ms or Sony?
  • I've been using this for around 8 months now on PC and Deck.

    • Having multiple sync profiles each with different configurations is great if you use a variety of devices.
    • The hall effect sticks are obviously great.
    • Some of the programmable button combos can come in handy.

    The only things I don't like about them are:

    • Sometimes it doesn't connect first try to my PC.
    • The right trigger developed a squeak after Diablo 4.

    Would still definitely recommend though because you're basically getting an Xbox Elite controller for the price of a standard Xbox controller.

  • How much processing power is needed for a camera server?
  • Just reporting back that I did the work last night to change the ingestion order for my cameras. I'm now using the go2rtc component of frigate as the first ingestion point. That component is serving a restream to both Frigate and my NAS' NVR. It's working much better now, with less frame delay, and less CPU usage on the NAS.

  • How much processing power is needed for a camera server?
  • I'm not sure that I would need this very much. I'm mostly interested in a sort of ephemeral surveilance system; I only really need to store, at most, a few days, and then rewrite over it all.

    This is exactly what I do. I simply cloud backup any event/object clips but only retain last 5 days. The cloud is if law enforcement needs it, or in the event of hardware failure/catastrophic house damage.

    What tweaking do you generally need to do for the camera server?

    Recording schedules change based on time of day/when we're in/out of the house. This is all handled as automations through Home Assistant, but is set up through Surveillance Station NVR.

  • How much processing power is needed for a camera server?
  • That's quite a few cameras. I would do an audit on how many you will actually need first, because you will likely find you could get by with 5-10.

    In terms of what you'll need - any Intel chip that supports QuickSync will likely do for the main ffmpeg processing of the image, but you will definitely want a Google Coral TPU. If you do end up needing 10-15 cameras, you may end up needing the M2 with dual TPU version of the Coral. You will also want some form of reliable storage for your clips (NAS local or NFS), as well as the ability to back up those clips/shots to the cloud somewhere.

    I'm personally running 4 cameras (3x1080 @ 15fps, 1x4k @ 25fps) through my ~7 year old Synology DS418play NAS using Surveillance Station as the first ingestion point, then restreaming from there to Frigate. Now that Surveillance Station can accept external events via webhook, I may look to swap the direction, and ingest into Frigate first, then restream out to Surveillance Station for long-term storage.

    "Why not directly use Frigate?" I hear you ask. Mostly because Frigate is pretty static. It's all set up via YAML with no config UI currently, whereas I can tweak stuff on Surveillance Station quite easily.

  • [Game] Looking for Recommendations
  • I'd hold on Cyberpunk. There will undoubtedly be a bundled/discounted version of it when Phantom Liberty comes out in September.

    As a counter offer, may I present Control? One of the best action games I've played in decades that also has a really interesting story (if you like trippy Twin Peaks/X-Files style stories) and it's only $10USD currently in the sale. Runs pretty well on the Deck, and if you have a beefy PC to play on as well, has some really great RTX features.

    The only other game that really fits your criteria that I would recommend is Hades which has already been mentioned. I put over 300 hours into Hades across PC and Switch (pre Steam Deck), and it's one of the only roguelike games that has a super compelling story.

  • [MEGATHREAD] What did you buy in the Steam Summer Sale?
  • Here's my decent haul. Some of them aren't really in the "Sale" as they just launched but have launch discounts.

    • Control Ultimate Edition: Already own it on Epic, but was cheap enough to re-buy for easier Steam Deck play.
    • Crab Champions: The meme song that become a really competent roguelike shooter!
    • Dave the Diver: What if Lucasarts made a mini-game filled roguelike?
    • DROP - System Breach: Sleeper hit for me. Intense puzzle/pattern recognition game with a great, simplistic hacking theme/style.
    • The Entropy Centre: Big Portal vibes, but using time!
    • Humanity: What if Lemmings, but you're an omniscient Shiba Inu. Plays great in VR too.
    • Prey: Loved Deathloop but never had a chance to play Prey.
    • Shogun Showdown: Crypt of the Necrodancer meets Slay the Spire - SIGN ME UP!
  • FFKBv3 - Daily driver for 6+ months

    Been using this for over 6 months now and have not really been tempted to try anything different. Using ink black linear switches in a self-printed gasket mount case.

    7
    InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)TR
    trankillity @lemmy.world
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