False idols. Lots of gold statues in mouse dens.
False idols. Lots of gold statues in mouse dens.
The Linux community has never been of one mind on anything. We have always been against, and for, everything.
Some distro or project will integrate AI, or not, and it will be forked. And then forked again.
Many AI models are run on Linux. Linux won’t be left behind in any real sense. Linux won’t lose market share over this.
Linux developers paid by AI firms will integrate it into products. Those that volunteer will make their own decisions.
If there is sufficient RAM on the laptop, Linux will cache a lot of metadata in other cache layers without NFS-Cache.
NFS-Cache is a specific cache for NFS, and does not represent all caching that can be done of files over NFS. “Direct I/O” is also a specific thing, and should not be generalized in the meanings of “direct” and “I/O”.
Let’s skip those entirely for now as I cannot simply explain either. I doubt either will matter in your use case, but look back if performance lags.
One laptop accessing one NFS share will have good performance on a quite local network.
NFS is an old protocol that is robust and used frequently. NFSv3 is not encrypted. NFSv4 has support for encryption. (ZeroTier can handle the encryption.)
SSHFS is a pseudo file system layered over SSH. SSH handles encryption. SSHFS is maybe 15 years old and is aimed at convenience. SSH is largely aimed at moving streams of text between two points securely. Maybe it is faster now than it was.
ZeroTier allows for a mobile, LAN-like experience. If the laptop is at a café, the files can be accessed as if at home, within network performance limits.
NFS and ZeroTier would likely work.
When at home NFS will be similar to a local drive, though a but slower. Faster than SSHFS. NFS is often used to expand limited local space.
I expect a cache layer on NFS is simple enough, but that is outside my experience.
The issue with syncing, is usually needing to sync everything.
I am sure there are levels of immortality. Like first you don’t age. Higher levels you can regrow your head. At some high level one has a body only if they want it.
Wait, Grandma didn’t shrink a couple feet?
Yeah. This is why fans get upset at bad sequels.
They are not just dolls to be played with every which way then tossed in a box. Chalk to be used on the sidewalk before the rain.
They are just as real to you, dear reader, as I am to you. The Enterprise is as applicable to my life as black holes and dinosaurs. The fiction in my head trying to interpret the world, is just as real as the fiction in your world.
OTOH, try to plan for the future in the physical world. Captain Janeway won’t lend you a 5.
I am failing to find source, but there is also a story about an older predictive model that worked great at one hospital, but failed miserably at the next. There was just enough variation in everything that the model broke.
(I think the New England Journal of Medicine podcast, but I am not finding the episode.)
$7.25 / 0.79 ~ 9.18 hash browns per hour.
$3.49 per hash brown ~ minimum wage of $32.07.
Makes you wonder about all the jobs paying less that and how much wages have been stolen.
Low. Electric street cars and all electric is wind and solar.
I have doubts.
Many communities in the USA don’t have garbage people. Everyone takes their garbage to the dump. There are people that work at the dump.
Someone does have to build and fix sewers, but no one has to clean another person’s toilet.
Also, no one only does pleasurable work, regardless of the economic system.
Why isn’t this just the default?
One may notice that for every new method, the old ways stay around, possibly forever. It is not the default because there were things that worked prior to flatpak. The distros that from before flatpak have likely added the capability, but won’t likely change their default for another decade, or more.
You tried. That is far more than many people. Good for you!
I have had similar experiences, but from Linux to other OSes. The mental models for using them are really different, and those don’t get enough discussion.
I have had great luck with my users’ home directories on ZFS. No issues in years. Used to have issues, and on those days I was glad root was on ext3.
I had issues with btrfs about 10 years ago. It is much better now.
Both experiences with Linux.
A different ZFS partition per user is really helpful for quota and migration.
Have you tried a restore? A non-differential smap snapshot should be fine, but differential snapshots would make a restore difficult to impossible.
A zfssend and zfsrestore with a differential snapshot would be more traditional. If one put mbuffer in the middle, it would even be fast.
I disagree with the premise that Android is Linux “fixed”. Sudo is a bridge for privilege compartmentalization. There is root on Android.
And for many of those points there is a solution, but not one many want to use. SELinux is poorly document and has a bad reputation, but does work. File systems can be mounted as to not execute anything on them.
Good topic idea though, I just disagree with the specific examples.
Yes! It is great.
Any more I reencode for local streaming to my TV.