

Yeah, evidently they really, really want you to sign up. They upped the period from the first three years to as long as you own the car (it doesn’t transfer to a new owner if you sell it).
— GPG Proofs —
This is an OpenPGP proof that connects my OpenPGP key to this Lemmy account. For details check out https://keyoxide.org/guides/openpgp-proofs
[ Verifying my OpenPGP key: openpgp4fpr:27265882624f80fe7deb8b2bca75b6ec61a21f8f ]
Yeah, evidently they really, really want you to sign up. They upped the period from the first three years to as long as you own the car (it doesn’t transfer to a new owner if you sell it).
When I bought my Hyundai they pushed fucking hard to sign up for their Blue link product. Free for life! Look, map updates! You can personalize your driver profile pic! Want to remote start your car over the Internet?
Luckily, my VIN wasn’t working for registration (I guess it hadn’t quite gone through fast enough that the car was purchased). I’ve gone two months without BlueLink and I’m hoping that’s saving me from some of the info gathering (or at least it’s not directly linked to me.
Good as in “the worst that the Internet has to offer is an old man orgy”.
It was a simpler time.
Jesus, tell me that site is still up. I need to be reminded of when the Internet had good things.
I bought a car that comes with a “free” 300k/30 year warranty, but only if to do oil changes every 4k miles or 3 months. Maybe this guy has something similar?
For me, I may try And keep it up for a bit, but driving to one particular dealer every 3 months just to get a ridiculous warranty that will probably never actually pay out isn’t worth it.
I’m not sure if the person I replied to was thinking about this movie in particular, but it certainly came to mind when I posted that gif:
Also of note - if you’re using docker (and Linux), make sure the user is/group id match across everything to eliminate any permissions issues.
They look a little like that sauce packet kitty from reddit years ago.
Not really, but I can give you my reasons for doing so. Know that you’ll need some shared storage (NFS, CIFS, etc) to take full advantage of the cluster.
I hope that helps give some reasons for doing a cluster, and apologies for not replying immediately. I’m happy to share more about my homelab/answer other questions about my setup.
I dunno, Trump showed the world you can completely give up decades of hard won soft power in only two months, maybe China will think it’s cool?
/S
Bench seats were in cars too! In the early 2000s I had a 1987 Chevy Caprice Classic. That thing was a boat with a couch for a front seat.
I had some luck cobbling together a HiFiBerry with some speakers. It’s not the same thing, but it does show up like a streamable audio device.
It’s not super cheap though.
Those are beasts! My homelab has three of them in a Proxmox cluster. I love that for not a ton of extra money you can throw in a PCIe expansion slot and the power consumption for all three is less than my second hand Dell Tower server.
At this rate, Google will pull so many features the Home Assistant, Whisper/Piper combo will have parity.
The only thing I’m missing from my OSS voice assistant is, “where is my phone”… And I’m fairly certain I could figure out how to get that working if I tried hard enough.
I love mine. It’s great in handheld mode with Moonbeam/Sunshine streaming from my gaming desktop, and it shines in docked mode.
And it’s a very capable Linux desktop too if you want to go that route.
Thanks for the recommendation - I just finished it (it’s a slow day). What an incredibly depressing and vivid book.
Sorry, I wasn’t clear - I use PowerDNS so that I can more easily deploy services that can be resolved by my internal networks (deployed via Kubernetes or Terraform). In my case, the secondary PowerDNS server does regular zone transfers from the primary in order to ensure it has a copy of all A, PTR, CNAME, etc records.
But PowerDNS (and all DNS servers really), can either be authoritative resolvers or recursors. In my case, the PDNS servers are authoritative for my homelab zone/domain and they perform recursive lookups (with caching) for non-authoritative domains like google.com, infosec.pub, etc. By pointing my PDNS servers to PiHole for recursive lookups, I ensure that I have ad blocking while still allowing for my automation to handle the homelab records.
This is overkill.
I have a dedicated raspberry pi for pihole, then two VMs running PowerDNS in Master/Slave mode. The PDNS servers use the Pihole as their primary recursive lookup, followed by some other Internet privacy DNS server that I can’t recall right now.
If I need to do maintenance on the pihole, power DNS can fall back to the internet DNS server. If I need to do updates on the PowerDNS cluster, I can do it one at a time to reduce the outage window.
EDIT: I should have phrased the first sentence: “My setup is overkill” rather than “This is overkill” - the Op is asking a very valid question and the passive phrasing of my post’s first sentence could be taken multiple ways.
First off, rude.
Secondly, great write up. :)