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[1314.16 --> 1315.78] This platform is crazy.
[1316.00 --> 1322.02] LogScale's index-free architecture means you can ingest over a petabyte of data per day and then search that with sub-second latency.
[1322.20 --> 1323.58] Not hours, not seconds.
[1324.14 --> 1331.16] And LogScale is up to 80% cheaper than competing platforms like Splunk or Elastic thanks to its reduced hardware and computational footprint.
[1331.16 --> 1337.48] I realized I probably could have used LogScale to get an alert and analyze when my original Home Assistant incident went down.
[1338.00 --> 1343.08] So now I think I'm going to hook up my current Home Assistant yellow box to it and then I can help troubleshoot when these Zigbee errors occur.
[1343.08 --> 1346.88] I think probably the best way to get going is with LogScale's Community Edition.
[1347.26 --> 1350.56] It is the largest no-cost data ingestion offering on the market.
[1351.14 --> 1356.08] And LogScale Community Edition allows you to ingest up to 16 gigabytes per day with seven-day retention.
[1356.52 --> 1357.74] No credit card required.
[1358.24 --> 1359.46] No trial period.
[1359.46 --> 1361.68] You've got it for the long haul.
[1362.54 --> 1367.56] This is perfect for self-hosters who just want to ingest some home logs and get a single view of everything going on in your environment.
[1368.08 --> 1370.78] It's way better than having separate places to go look at everything.
[1371.36 --> 1375.34] LogScale gives you the ability to bring it all together and correlate it in one place for easier troubleshooting.
[1375.90 --> 1377.10] And that's nice when it's your hobby.
[1377.56 --> 1378.16] You want it easy.
[1378.70 --> 1380.00] You want it usable and quick.
[1380.42 --> 1381.42] You don't want it to be a job.
[1381.94 --> 1388.36] So go get started with LogScale Community Edition for free at CrowdStrike.com slash L-C-E.
[1388.36 --> 1392.16] That's CrowdStrike.com slash L-C-E.
[1394.44 --> 1397.10] All right, Joe, how about we wrap it up with some feedback?
[1397.60 --> 1400.08] I want to give a shout-out for our Matrix rooms out there.
[1400.18 --> 1402.52] We've been seeing some growth in the meetup rooms.
[1402.62 --> 1406.80] We have some dedicated rooms like a London Colony meetup room in honor of Joe being here.
[1407.18 --> 1408.38] There's a Mumble Colony in there.
[1408.44 --> 1412.14] There's one for Ohio, for folks going to Ohio Linux Fest.
[1412.90 --> 1414.56] Matrix lets us create all kinds of rooms, so we do it.
[1415.02 --> 1415.78] And you can find them all.
[1416.06 --> 1418.18] Just go to jupiterbroadcasting.com slash Matrix.
[1419.02 --> 1422.28] For the deets on that, every now and then you'll see a wild Joe in there, too.
[1423.50 --> 1424.94] Rumor has it he's in the Fetaverse.
[1425.28 --> 1427.00] Rumor has it, yeah, if you look carefully.
[1428.62 --> 1430.90] We got an email into the show from Belgium.
[1431.72 --> 1432.96] Brain Damage writes in,
[1433.52 --> 1435.04] Dear Chris and Alex, and also Joe,
[1435.62 --> 1437.66] I've been listening to Self-Hosted since the start.
[1437.80 --> 1439.30] Looking forward to it every release day.
[1439.66 --> 1444.16] So I monitor my stuff, and I've tried monitoring software like Nagios, Prometheus,
[1444.36 --> 1447.94] currently trying out Zabbix, but none of them seem to just click with me.
[1448.94 --> 1450.88] I'm wondering what you're using and why,
[1451.00 --> 1453.60] and if you've ever considered switching to another option.
[1454.28 --> 1457.14] And also for your European listeners, the German website,
[1458.24 --> 1462.74] itsco.de, most of the time has secondhand small form factor systems on sale.
[1462.74 --> 1464.86] Yeah, I took a look, and there's a bunch on there.
[1464.96 --> 1466.40] We'll put a link to that in the show notes, too.
[1466.80 --> 1470.02] This is a good option for people just starting their self-hosted journey.
[1470.30 --> 1471.70] Greetings from Belgium.
[1472.32 --> 1473.94] So my answer is boring.
[1474.00 --> 1474.94] It's just Uptime Kuma.
[1475.08 --> 1477.00] And I wonder, do you have a favorite Uptime tool, Joe?
[1477.00 --> 1483.72] Yeah, I use Uptime Robot, which is free for as many domains as I've ever thrown at it.
[1483.86 --> 1486.76] And I think it monitors every five minutes and sends you an email,
[1486.96 --> 1490.34] and then sends you an email when it's back up and tells you how long it was down for.
[1490.72 --> 1493.76] It is very handy sometimes for my own sites,
[1493.88 --> 1497.56] but really it's more handy for just watching some other sites
[1497.56 --> 1501.70] and laughing at people who can't keep them up for very long a time.
[1501.70 --> 1502.98] So that's good.
[1503.04 --> 1505.80] So it gives you a report of their downtime.
[1506.50 --> 1506.88] Yeah, yeah.
[1506.90 --> 1509.56] And you can see the percentage uptime that each domain has,
[1509.58 --> 1511.62] and you can just stick any domain you want into it.
[1511.78 --> 1512.10] Nice.
[1512.50 --> 1516.42] All right, we'll put a link to Uptime Robot in the show notes as well.
[1516.42 --> 1520.26] And I'll give a shout out to Uptime Kuma, which we have running here.
[1520.46 --> 1522.26] And there's a few other good ones out there,
[1522.36 --> 1525.04] but those ones are just simple enough that they're easy to set up.
[1525.20 --> 1526.58] They're kind of nice for the hobby level.
[1527.28 --> 1529.26] Yeah, and Uptime Robot does have a paid tier.
[1529.36 --> 1531.42] I've never needed to try it, but presumably.
[1531.70 --> 1532.08] It's better.
[1532.16 --> 1532.46] I don't know.
[1533.02 --> 1535.02] We got some big boosts this week, and we got a whole bunch,
[1535.06 --> 1536.98] so we're going to read just a few on the show this week.
[1537.04 --> 1539.10] The first one comes in from The Helpful Idiot.
[1540.08 --> 1542.06] 320,001 sat, says,
[1542.16 --> 1544.24] Long-time listener, first-time caller.
[1544.24 --> 1545.40] Well, thank you, Helpful Idiot.
[1545.98 --> 1546.92] Very generous boost.
[1547.00 --> 1548.00] He says, Love the shows.
[1548.44 --> 1551.14] I want to share my blog with you guys, thehelpfulidiot.com.
[1551.40 --> 1553.24] It's nothing special, but it has a few examples,
[1553.34 --> 1556.48] some of my home lab projects which were inspired by your shows.
[1556.92 --> 1558.48] My day job is an eye doctor,
[1558.48 --> 1563.08] and he sent a video behind his wire guard,
[1563.58 --> 1565.26] like an xCloud VM box,
[1565.74 --> 1568.64] which might be in this picture on his website at helpfulidiot.com.
[1569.20 --> 1570.18] There's some good stuff on here,
[1570.24 --> 1571.92] including one that actually was very,
[1572.18 --> 1573.88] which was actually kind of really up my alley,
[1573.98 --> 1577.02] which are these big outdoor decoration lights
[1577.02 --> 1578.34] that he's integrated with Home Assistant.
[1578.52 --> 1580.02] It's funny that he's an eye doctor,
[1580.26 --> 1582.04] and his cable management is an eyesore.
[1582.04 --> 1584.28] Oh, calling him out.
[1584.88 --> 1585.22] Calling him out.
[1585.22 --> 1587.00] Well, at least it makes me feel better about mine.
[1589.22 --> 1593.56] C-dubs boosted him with 40,404 sats using Boost CLI.
[1593.74 --> 1595.06] So that was a series of boosts.
[1595.10 --> 1598.16] I think I put it all in one big baller boost.