

Yup. Netflix runs on FreeBSD.
Humanoid being, loves gardening, cooking, the outdoors, resilience and sustainability


Yup. Netflix runs on FreeBSD.
Thank you, that sheds some light onto it, yes. I’m still wondering how this number marches up. Just using the device by far uses not even comparable amount of energy than e.g. the production and then it also depends if you use green energy or a diesel generator in your backyard.
Not sure how to read this.
Anyone knows how the usage is being estimated? What is the expected lifespan and how does one come up with a carbon budget there?


Would also be interested in the background, if you like please!
I use a 50:50 Durum-wheat mixture which works great. The reason for using Semolina or Durum is that the pasta doesn’t overcook so fast. You can also make 100% wheat pasta, that’s perfectly tasty but you gotta keep a better eye in not overcooking it. That’s all.
50:50 makes my life easier and tastes damn good, in my opinion.
I use https://miniflux.app/ now after switching from tinytinyRSS, which was in fact, not so tiny 😉
Miniflux has a simple, minimal web UI which works nicely from any device. It is kept simple and minimal, which I consider nice but might not be everyone’s cup of tea.
In short: this is small, nice, easy to use and it runs on minimal resources. I’m happily using it for years already. 👍
Right now I’m working on reducing our individual plastic waste. I noticed that we’ve gotten careless and we produce a huge amount of preventable plastic trash, so that’s for the next month the goal.
Quick question: How much water does this provide? Can you fully water your garden with this? And also: Is a good rain day able to fully refill it?
Trying to get some realistic estimates about what to expect from rain collection, and I find this idea pretty cool!


i have a similar belt, which I bought … years ago. Using it daily and not looking back.
Sorry but this article is factually wrong in so many ways. It reads as someone wants to share his own experiences based on a not well researched background and wrote this down then.
The only valid point is that btrfs is natively integrated into Linux, all other points are either demonstrably wrong, blown out of proportion or usage opinions.