

Consumers: “We don’t want AI data centers anywhere near our homes!”
Nvidia: “Ohhhh, you want them as close to your homes as physically possible?”


Consumers: “We don’t want AI data centers anywhere near our homes!”
Nvidia: “Ohhhh, you want them as close to your homes as physically possible?”


How is it able to get the latitude and longitude of the devices? As far as I’m aware, the bluetooth spec doesn’t provide coordinates as part of its metadata. And you’d need some kind of triangulation method otherwise. I’m certainly not able to get the coordinates of my bluetooth devices. Wish I could, would make finding the remote a lot easier.

I use Jellyfin along with the iOS client Manet. It’s not the best UI for CarPlay, but it gets the job done.
Awesome software, I had no idea this existed! Your setup seems extremely similar to mine (Proxmox as hypervisor + OPNsense as firewall + other services).
Does homepage run in a container like everything else? Or does it run on the Proxmox VE layer. If it’s in a container, is setting up discovery among all the other containers difficult?
The software for linux phones is pretty much there. Gnome and KDE mobile are surprisingly capable. There’s built in apps for every basic thing you’d need on a phone like a dialer, SMS app, camera, etc. plus all the normal apps adapted to work with mobile like the calculator and maps apps.
The only real limitation is with the hardware. I have no idea why all new linux phones launch with specs from a decade ago. You can get a better experience by flashing ported Postmarket OS to an Android phone like the Nothing phone or a OnePlus 6t.
It shouldn’t be like that, no idea why it’s impossible to just have a linux phone with decent specs and a good camera on par with modern flagships.