lckdscl [they/them]

I self-identify as an nblob, a non-binary little object.

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  • 38 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 10th, 2023

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  • Okay I think I might know what you mean? I just tried doing that and got it to work. We can compare what we did. Here’s mine.

    I created a shared folder called “Shared”

    then I create a group called “All” and mount the “Shared” folder to /shared

    I went to a user and add them to group “All”

    Examining that user’s files

    I can navigate into that shared folder and access everything (I have stuff in there already).









  • I think all the RAM related issues were closed a while back and were supposedly fixed. I just don’t understand why when interfacing with the front-end, it uses so much it would get OOM kill itself with 1.5 GB allocated memory.

    Every page, as well as loading in the initial dashboard from an idle state, spikes the RAM. Are there no clever lazyloading happening or something? Surely viewing and modifying database entries can’t be this memory intensive?

    Maybe it’s just an unoptimized Python thing. I stopped self-hosting stuff written in Python, with the exception of Linkding (which takes a while to also submit a link) and Whoogle.




  • Why do you think this article is anti-nuclear?

    They didn’t say nuclear plants or nuclear energy is “bad”. The article discusses China’s reactions to the situation, which were painted with skepticism and disappointment (and rightly so; did China or Korea get a chance to conduct their own tests and investigation before this waste water was released to a shared body of water?). If you set aside the scientific “facts” for a moment on tritium or ALPS or whatever, the question here is why should China or Korea put blind faith in Japan’s waste handling protocol, especially when their material conditions, i.e. their food source, come from there?