uprightanimal

joined 11 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

Eventually I get tired of watching any of them, but I used to like DigitalRev with Kai and Lam. They were a good balance of informative and fun to watch.

For reviews I watched Chris Nicholls, Matt Granger, Steve Perry. It's hard to find a channel that isn't too 'youtuber' in style ("smash that like button and don't forget to subscribe!"), and knows what they're talking about.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

I pay for Flickr pro, and have no regrets. My use case is a little different than most I think... I use it as another backup mainly, but also use the API access on a WordPress site, and my android tv box has flickfolio running to play slideshows. I also run a Piwigo server at home for family sharing.

 

Hi all. I apologized if this has already been asked. I didn't find any recent discussion on the topic.

I just collected around 2000 slides taken between 1970 and 1988, most of them Kodachrome.

While sorting through them, I used the date stamped on the slide carrier to organize them, assuming it was the date the film was processed. Generally, that seemed accurate, and aligned with my own memories and notes on the boxes.

One batch had me puzzled however. They are 110-format slides, and the date embossed (not stamped in ink) is about three years before the photo was taken (slide says Aug 75, but the picture was taken at a house we moved into in 1978)

Was my original assumption (date of processing) wrong?

The only possible explanation I can imagine is the lab used the date of manufacture on the roll. I'm hoping to find an answer to this, as this is a family archive, and I want the dates to be correct as I scan them.

Any help is appreciated, thanks!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

As another user suggested, if you're new to this, consider an old PC instead of a hosted VPS. In either case, if you want to explore self-hosting, the Sky's the limit. You could do as little as a local storage/file server, all the way up to your own virtual cloud.

For example, I run (on a pair of HP EliteDesk mini-pcs)- Jellyfin media server, Logitech Media server (squeezeserver), Homeassistant, Piwigo, phpipam, Zabbix, and a couple of other things. I also use it as a lab, so any time I want to experiment, I can just spin up a VM and mess around.

If you spend some time in this sub, you'll find more than enough project ideas to keep you busy. Depending on your current skill level, you might find r/linuxupskillschallenge helpful.

Have fun!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

This is what I normally recommend as well. Much more flexible, totally under your own control (for better or worse), and cheaper in the long run.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (2 children)

Can you clarify your terms? Unless I'm mistaken, VPS is a Virtual Private Server (instead of a dedicated bare-metal machine). KVM (Kernel Virtualized Machine) is one kind of VPS. Hyper-V, OpenVZ, XEN are other VPS types. Each have benefits and suited for different circumstances.

IIRC, OpenVZ are usually the cheapest, as they are containers, so a host can run more of them. KVM are more like a full-fledged Linux-kernel OS.