2.) I’ve always wondered, but didn’t want to get flamed for asking: What if you have pet chickens? I don’t eat them, they live a great chicken life, but I end up with a ton of eggs that I give to people I know. Obviously those eggs are eaten. Does this count as some kind of horrible animal cruelty?
Eh, it depends on how you look at it. Chickens are just domesticated Red Junglefowl, and we’ve bred them over the last few thousand years to be bigger, (probably tastier), and lay a lot more eggs.
IMO, egg layers and other common breeds are probably perfectly happy and comfortable birds without any ‘real’ cruelty. The way we’ve bred them certainly has made them more susceptible to certain health problems and shortened their max lifespan some (compared to their wild ancestors), but my experience with my birds has been that as long as they’re healthy, they seem to be perfectly happy with life.
I think of it the same as how we’ve bred Border Collies into existence. They’re very different from their pre-domestication ancestors, but they’re also not so severely altered that they have inherent health issues or other severe issues.
Broilers (meat chickens), however are definitely on the crueler side. Those poor things are only meant to convert feed to meat, and the whole living part is probably considered undesirable. Most only need to live somewhere between a month and a year before slaughter, and I imagine if you let them go any longer they’ll drop dead from health issues.
Rock Auto for stuff you need next week. AutoZone for common stuff you need immediately. O’Reilly for uncommon stuff you need immediately. eBay for used OEM stuff.
Rock Auto is cheap but you’ll have to wait for shipping. AutoZone is not too expensive but won’t have rarer items. O’Reilly seems to warehouse almost anything but is more expensive. And if you have no other choice, NAPA.
Had a starter die on me. Autozone had one in stock in store nearby and I had the car fixed that day.
I had a rat chew some wiring all the way down to the connector on a Saturday evening. Rock Auto carried a replacement, but I couldn’t wait for a week. AutoZone didn’t carry it at all. But O’Reilly was able to get the part to a store by noon the next day, and I had the car working by evening.
For some reason, there’s a weird 8TB 5640 RPM Blue that’s CMR. I have one.
Dunno about the rest for sure but I think they’re all SMR (except maybe 1TB).
In my experience, all that truly matters is that the drive is on the right recording technology (CMR, SMR, and maybe someday HAMR will be in the hands of us consumer plebs).
There are two reasons to care:
If your use case involves only ever writing a small amount of data, point 1 doesn’t matter very much. If you’re using software which doesn’t care about CMR/SMR, point 2 doesn’t matter very much.
If either point 1 or 2 matter to you, then you should go with CMR drives. If neither matter, you may go with SMR drives if you so chose.
PS: Both WD Blues and Seagate Barracudas are (often) CMR. Seagate consult this page: www.seagate.com/products/cmr-smr-list/. WD lists SMR/CMR on their website when you look up the part number.
In my home NAS, I use ZFS and have ran all sorts of drives through it. It’s ran old consumer drives I’ve pulled out of scrap hardware, it’s ran NAS-grade drives, and it’s ran enterprise-grade drives… And since they’re all CMR, I can’t say there was much if any difference at all.
The only difference between the tiers that I find interesting/useful is the number of metrics you can pull off the drive. The fancier ones spit more metrics which could help you detect signs of failure earlier, but that requires knowing what to look for.
So at the end of the day, as long as the drive’s recording technology works with your software, you’re fine.
RE: External drives (seen in a comment)
External drives can be a great way to get disks for cheap, however they are loot boxes. What drive you get inside of them depends on the capacity, the manufacturer, and pure luck. You can generally look up the model number and see what people have said is inside, then hope you get whatever they got. (Generally, manufacturers don’t often change what they put in there, but they do change over time.)
I used to use them, but found that since I’m only hosting for myself, I just don’t benefit much (if at all) from their services. The only thing that was actually doing any amount of work was Tunnel (similar to you, I can’t forward ports).
Their service decrypts/snoops on your traffic by nature, and while my traffic is mostly just updating todo lists, taking notes, and backing up photos, I also sync my keepass database and in general just don’t want my data snooped on.
I’ve since rolled my own Tunnel equivalent with frp on a VPS and have completely dropped CF.
You’re good in that there are no immediate problems with that setup. I run a largely similar setup, have run it for years, and have never had issues.
You can always add more security layers if desired, but from my personal experience and with my risk tolerance, I haven’t personally found it necessary.
I recently moved from X11 (BSPWM) to Wayland (Hyprland) and while I did get rid of a very annoying bug with bspwm, it did some with a few of it’s own quirks/annoyances:
Maybe if I wasn’t a masochist and installed something normal, such as KDE, I wouldn’t have any of these issues. However, I apparently and unfortunately get great pleasure out of plopping my testicles onto an anvil and smashing them like a blacksmith forges raw iron.
Rust, however, is cool. I like Rust. I can’t say that I approve of replacing everything under the sun with a Rust rewrite for no good reason, but the language itself is fine.