During AC season, 71 during the day, 68 at night. Geothermal FTW.
During AC season, 71 during the day, 68 at night. Geothermal FTW.
Exactly. I’ve run Linux almost exclusively for more than 20 years. I did the whole roll-my-own thing for a while. Now most of the computers I deal with regularly run mostly-stock Ubuntu.
Bug zapper flyswatter. Like you can buy at Harbor Freight for a few bucks. It might not be a terribly effective solution to the overall fly population, but in terms of grim-bloody-vengeance-per-dollar, it’s one of the best investments I’ve ever made.
Specific subs that don’t exist on Lemmy, especially Q&A-type subs with no equivalent (or very few members). Things like AskPlumbers. It’ll just take time to build those communities here.
RadarScope. I work a very weather-dependent job.
Pihole is on an old Pi 2 or 3. HA is in my network hub and attached to external storage. Office is in another building.
Agreed. Charger in the garage, plug it in overnight, ready to go. It’s been a bit frustrating on road trips when I can’t find a working charger conveniently close to the route, but a bit of planning beforehand has made it work. 99% of the time it’s great.
If I didn’t have a garage or other dependable access to a L2 charger overnight, it would be far more challenging. I’m also 15 miles from the closest public charger, which would be a major hassle.
One for pihole. One for Home Assistant. One for an office dashboard.
Dealing with winter. I live in the rural upper Midwest, where winter can hit -20 with whiteout blizzards, week-long power outages, and car-burying snowdrifts. I’ve seen too many people move here from warmer places and think “I guess I’ll buy a warmer coat and a snow shovel”, rather than “I should have a backup generator, a backup heat source, a few barrels of spare fuel, a month’s worth of stockpiled food, and at least two different pieces of heavy snow-moving machinery tested to be in good working order”.