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[2190.96 β†’ 2197.60] Now, we have mentioned this one previously because it goes by the name vabeen1111 slash recipes on GitHub.
[2197.84 β†’ 2199.12] That's the repo it's in.
[2199.76 β†’ 2201.88] I think the Tandoor name must be new.
[2201.88 β†’ 2204.30] I don't know how old exactly it is.
[2204.46 β†’ 2206.64] Yeah, it is a new release too.
[2206.80 β†’ 2208.32] So that might be maybe they did a name change.
[2208.62 β†’ 2210.66] But they are using medics for their documentation.
[2211.18 β†’ 2212.74] So I've got to give them a plus point for that.
[2213.18 β†’ 2219.46] Yeah, it says here that they're happy to announce they've released a new version, which gives the application its well-deserved name and logo, Tandoor recipes.
[2219.62 β†’ 2220.18] So there you go.
[2220.60 β†’ 2222.62] It runs out of a Docker container.
[2222.90 β†’ 2225.38] It will also run on Unpaid, Synology, Kubernetes.
[2225.74 β†’ 2227.74] You can do it manually as well if you want to.
[2228.40 β†’ 2232.36] There's a bunch of interesting stuff about syncing and storage in their documentation.
[2232.36 β†’ 2237.88] So it's going to take a lot for me to throw away Showdown because I do genuinely really like it.
[2237.96 β†’ 2241.68] And I've modified the CSS, so I've got some fuzzy search.
[2241.74 β†’ 2243.10] You know how I love my fuzzy search.
[2243.24 β†’ 2244.00] Oh, that's cool.
[2244.28 β†’ 2246.08] You know, I've customized Showdown for my own needs.
[2246.54 β†’ 2248.92] But then maybe the grass is greener.
[2248.94 β†’ 2250.04] Maybe I should try this one out.
[2250.46 β†’ 2252.24] I mean, it does have the import functionality.
[2252.24 β†’ 2254.94] Downside, though, is it needs a Postgres database.
[2255.42 β†’ 2260.88] And I've already got, like, it feels like a dozen different database containers running.
[2260.96 β†’ 2262.14] Do I need another one?
[2262.62 β†’ 2265.44] That is a constant internal battle.
[2265.62 β†’ 2267.70] And sometimes I'm just down to, ah, who cares?
[2267.80 β†’ 2268.64] Just run a bunch.
[2268.72 β†’ 2269.56] You've got the resources.
[2269.70 β†’ 2273.60] And other times, like the sysadmin in me is just not having it.
[2274.12 β†’ 2277.18] It's just you can't run three copies of Postgres.
[2277.30 β†’ 2278.20] That doesn't make any sense.
[2278.28 β†’ 2279.00] They're different versions.
[2279.08 β†’ 2281.44] They have different security issues, different features.
[2281.44 β†’ 2282.22] What are you doing?
[2282.82 β†’ 2284.44] And it's a recipes' app at the end of the day.
[2284.76 β†’ 2285.90] Like, you know what I mean?
[2286.08 β†’ 2291.90] Just having the files in clear text on disk feels more future-proof to me.
[2292.04 β†’ 2297.54] So if this person loses interest in maintaining this particular app for whatever reason,
[2297.78 β†’ 2300.64] I'm not up the creek without a paddle, so to speak.
[2300.64 β†’ 2302.22] That, I think, is a great feature of Showdown.
[2302.66 β†’ 2306.14] That kind of clear text back end gives me peace of mind.
[2306.34 β†’ 2307.10] That's just it.
[2307.22 β†’ 2308.50] Peace of mind for that kind of stuff.
[2308.86 β†’ 2311.04] And if Showdown stops working for some reason,
[2311.04 β†’ 2314.10] I can just pull it up in any text editor, and it's still readable.
[2314.52 β†’ 2317.24] Yeah, it's almost as good as writing them down on an index card.
[2318.52 β†’ 2320.08] You know, you laugh at that.
[2320.18 β†’ 2324.56] But I'm pretty sure if I asked my mom to go and find me a recipe for something,
[2325.36 β†’ 2328.12] she would find it in less time than it takes me to fix.
[2328.58 β†’ 2329.90] Oh, Showdown's not working?
[2330.06 β†’ 2334.20] Okay, well, let me just SSH in and do this, do that, do the other.
[2334.70 β†’ 2336.04] And before you know it, 10 minutes later,
[2336.04 β†’ 2338.10] you've forgotten that you're actually looking for a recipe,
[2338.10 β†’ 2340.12] and then you go and order pizza instead, so.
[2341.42 β†’ 2344.08] Yeah, and meanwhile, she's got the index card ready to go.
[2344.18 β†’ 2344.84] It's very true.
[2345.04 β†’ 2345.96] There's something to that.
[2346.64 β†’ 2350.08] A reminder, you can find our sponsor, our Cloud Guru, on social media.
[2350.22 β†’ 2351.66] They're just slashed a Cloud Guru.
[2351.82 β†’ 2353.68] It's really easy, like on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube,
[2353.98 β†’ 2355.50] pretty much all the social media platforms.
[2355.80 β†’ 2357.16] Just slash a Cloud Guru.
[2357.66 β†’ 2358.62] Also, our members.
[2358.86 β†’ 2361.64] Thank you to our members, self-hosted. Show slash SRE.
[2361.78 β†’ 2362.64] You support the show.
[2363.20 β†’ 2365.00] You become our site reliability engineers.
[2365.00 β†’ 2367.76] You get a limited ad feed and extra content.
[2368.20 β†’ 2369.34] The post show.
[2369.92 β†’ 2371.52] Self-hosted. Show slash SRE.
[2371.72 β†’ 2373.64] If you'd like to support the show and become a member.
[2374.16 β†’ 2375.64] My Wise cam 3 came in this week,
[2375.70 β†’ 2377.26] so we're going to have a little chat about that today.
[2377.36 β†’ 2378.64] Yes, that's going to be the post show.
[2378.68 β†’ 2380.46] I ordered a few of them, so I got thoughts.
[2380.60 β†’ 2381.14] Of course you did.
[2383.06 β†’ 2385.32] So you can go to self-hosted. Show slash contact,
[2385.60 β†’ 2387.28] and that's the place to go to get in touch with us.
[2387.52 β†’ 2390.56] You can find me on Twitter at Ironic Badger.
[2390.56 β†’ 2393.26] Oh, I'm there as well, at Chris Elias,
[2393.38 β†’ 2395.68] and the show is at self-hosted.show.
[2395.98 β†’ 2398.20] On Discord, I'm at Alex.
[2398.62 β†’ 2400.00] So thanks very much for listening, everybody.
[2400.26 β†’ 2402.68] That was self-hosted. Show slash 40.
β€’ Nabu Casa acquiring ESP Home and the benefits of the acquisition
β€’ Explanation of what ESP Home is and how it simplifies firmware management for ESP boards
β€’ Discussion of potential future improvements to ESP Home through integration with Home Assistant
β€’ Linode's role as a cloud hosting provider and its support for the show
β€’ Hosts major infrastructure on Linode and praises its performance
β€’ Compares Linode's costs to AWS, Google Cloud, and Azure (30-50% cheaper)
β€’ Discusses flexibility in deploying a mix of on-premises and cloud computing
β€’ Mentions Linode's 11 global data centers and monitoring tools
β€’ Cites Cloud Spectator study that shows Linode has best CPU and disk performance among providers
β€’ Introduces guest Jeff Geerling, an Ansible expert and YouTube creator
β€’ Discusses Jeff's background with Ansible, from getting started to writing a popular 101 guide
β€’ What Ansible is and how it automates repetitive tasks
β€’ YAML configuration in Ansible, its advantages over JSON/XML, and common criticisms
β€’ Misuse of Ansible features, such as turning it into a programming language or abusing conditions in tasks
β€’ Importance of using Python for complex logic and separating code from configuration
β€’ Overview of recent changes in Ansible 3.0 and the ongoing transition from Ansible 2.9