That’s horrible, I hope you’re doing better now
I joined Lemmy back in 2020 and have been using it as qaz@lemmy.ml until somewhere in 2023 when I switched to lemmy.world. I’m interested in Linux, FOSS, and several other subjects.
That’s horrible, I hope you’re doing better now
I used to be put everything in ~/Programming at the top level. I later started grouping projects by type (JVM, Web etc.) in subfolders because it was getting hard to find things. This was synced with Nextcloud. However, I then at some point passed 2 million files (200GB) in said folder and decided to search for a better solution.
I ended up using a selfhosted Forgejo instance. It allows for easy code searching across all projects, tagging projects by topic and language, LFS, and has useful project management tools built-in.
Thanks! I’ll try that
EDIT: It did not help, I’ll look into it tomorrow
Oh, that makes sense.
I tried it, and ran it in the latest broken snapshot and was surprised why it didn’t roll back to a previous version 😅.
That’s what I’ve been doing for the past 2 days
KDE, it does what I want it to do.
Afaik this is for servers without a built-in KVM like e.g. self built servers or repurposed workstations.
That feels shockingly accurate
I just tried it and was pleasently surprised.
That’s what everybody has been asking themselves.
I appreciate it, but I just thought it was funny
The DDOS was done by “SN_blackmeta”, it’s a Russian organization that claims to be pro-palestine. They say they did it in protest against the way Palestinians are treated. The hackers behind the data breach are unknown afaik.
Of course, you need to be clear that this post isn’t for people who don’t have skin, right?
Wow, yeah that’s a big difference from how I remember him
Did you configure video encoding?
Why do you refer to yourself like that?
Zooming out a little would at least show that the changes are minor.
It consisted of tensors weights, datasets (which can reach several gigabytes), images, 3d models, and roughly 250+ programming projects with binaries, git without LFS and also a lot build files.
Nextcloud was able to sync it all, but syncing was getting so slow that I had to keep my new laptop running for almost an entire day to get all synced to it. It also wasn’t that great at excluding certain folders (like build cache folders or NPM package files), you would have to set up exclusions on each device separately. Another problem with Nextcloud sync was that it would sometimes duplicate projects after had been moved in a subfolder.