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[2740.54 --> 2744.52] first time in 2012, I've got some Apple notes from 2012.
[2744.84 --> 2747.86] I then got some simple notes that I used to use for a long time.
[2748.10 --> 2751.00] And then I moved to notational velocity for a little while.
[2751.00 --> 2756.52] And then I moved to something out and I've got stuff scattered everywhere.
[2756.52 --> 2760.10] And it's just, it's not, it's not nice.
[2760.18 --> 2760.80] It's not manageable.
[2760.80 --> 2764.70] Whenever I think, oh, where, where did I write down the serial number for that motherboard?
[2764.98 --> 2767.16] I think, oh God, which app did I put that into?
[2767.28 --> 2768.66] Because when, when did I buy it?
[2769.62 --> 2770.60] Yeah, I know.
[2770.64 --> 2772.06] Or, and in my case, Evernote too.
[2772.62 --> 2776.62] Nomadic Coder sent 1,555 sats to say on an Evernote replacement.
[2776.62 --> 2778.70] And this is probably the number one I heard.
[2779.16 --> 2780.64] So I'm curious to know what you think about this.
[2781.30 --> 2783.80] Try Joplin with Nextcloud.
[2783.94 --> 2786.40] I moved from Evernote and was happy with that.
[2786.66 --> 2788.12] It syncs using Nextcloud.
[2788.12 --> 2794.60] What Nomadic Coder has here is probably what I've heard the most is Joplin with Nextcloud.
[2795.40 --> 2801.86] I'm tempted to try that, but I'd have to rely on Nextcloud to do some of the optical character recognition stuff it looks like.
[2802.32 --> 2804.92] So I'd be going even deeper into Nextcloud land.
[2805.50 --> 2806.72] Yeah, Joplin's fine.
[2806.72 --> 2812.38] I mean, it's, um, it's sync has lost me data in the past, which I think we covered on this show even.
[2812.94 --> 2818.70] And that was what I, what kind of forced me towards the notion angle is whilst I was writing some articles for Ars Technica.
[2818.86 --> 2822.44] So I was quite cheesed off when all that work disappeared on me.
[2823.24 --> 2823.60] I recall.
[2824.14 --> 2824.46] All right.
[2824.46 --> 2825.44] That was Joplin, huh?
[2825.70 --> 2825.94] All right.
[2825.94 --> 2826.64] That was Joplin.
[2826.64 --> 2833.04] I mean, it only happened one time, but much like Zigbee, one time is one time too many.
[2833.62 --> 2837.52] I don't feel like I live in a first world country when these things happen.
[2837.70 --> 2838.60] I know, right?
[2839.06 --> 2840.62] Data loss is not acceptable.
[2841.42 --> 2842.44] Well, here's the last note.
[2842.68 --> 2845.64] DJ boosted in with 69,420 sats.
[2845.70 --> 2847.60] Hey, I wonder if there was a message there.
[2847.78 --> 2848.12] Nice.
[2848.62 --> 2851.10] Hot boost coming in from an OG SRE.
[2851.28 --> 2852.92] Glad to hear that Joe was on the show.
[2853.12 --> 2853.56] Yeah, yeah.
[2853.56 --> 2862.08] Joe and I had, by the way, a good ZFS versus ButterFS discussion in the members post show, which was spicy.
[2862.26 --> 2863.32] What is there to discuss?
[2866.14 --> 2868.04] ButterFS is better, isn't it?
[2868.16 --> 2868.50] Oh, yeah.
[2868.62 --> 2868.80] I know.
[2869.70 --> 2872.00] Why can't we have both is my version.
[2872.16 --> 2876.10] Why can't I put ButterFS on my root and ZFS on my data?
[2876.38 --> 2877.98] That's my position.
[2878.68 --> 2881.58] I feel like maybe ButterFS for a Raspberry Pi.
[2881.58 --> 2890.10] But then, of course, after I said that, I saw somebody release an article about how well ZFS seems to work on the Raspberry Pi 4.
[2890.10 --> 2892.02] So I got to try it.
[2892.08 --> 2897.44] I really do have to try it because I've only ever tried ButterFS on the Raspberry Pi and I've never tried ZFS on the Raspberry Pi.
[2897.58 --> 2900.72] I just wish we could get over this licensing bollocks, don't you?
[2901.02 --> 2901.20] Yeah.
[2901.20 --> 2901.38] Yeah.
[2901.66 --> 2902.46] That would solve it.
[2902.94 --> 2904.86] That certainly would be nice, wouldn't it?
[2905.72 --> 2906.12] Maybe.
[2906.32 --> 2907.34] Maybe in 2035.
[2907.74 --> 2914.70] I just think anytime anybody asks me about something at work and I've got my corporate hats on, I'm like, oh, just use ZFS.
[2914.70 --> 2917.36] Oh, no, no, you can't recommend that today, Alex.
[2917.46 --> 2917.64] Nope.
[2917.82 --> 2918.02] Nope.
[2918.08 --> 2919.44] Have to do the company thing.
[2919.92 --> 2920.28] That's true.
[2920.34 --> 2922.72] You're working for the company that's trying to come up with Stratus.
[2922.82 --> 2923.82] I mean, that's never going to.
[2924.10 --> 2925.28] Well, that's IBM now.
[2925.34 --> 2926.58] All the storage stuff has moved.
[2927.00 --> 2928.24] I'm sure you saw that news.
[2928.48 --> 2928.82] Yeah, yeah.
[2928.82 --> 2929.08] Okay.
[2930.00 --> 2931.74] I've actually been having a lot of fun.
[2931.94 --> 2935.90] I've been, you know, the whole home setup, re-architecting some things.
[2936.36 --> 2938.40] And it's like Proxmox versus XCPNG.
[2938.40 --> 2941.22] And I'm just over here like, you know, OpenShift is a thing.
[2941.66 --> 2943.40] We can do a lot with OpenShift.
[2944.28 --> 2945.42] OpenShift is pretty cool.
[2946.24 --> 2947.68] Ceph is a pretty easy setup.
[2947.82 --> 2949.24] Like, let's go hyperconverge.
[2949.30 --> 2950.06] This is fine.
[2950.28 --> 2952.28] I can run it on 16 servers for free.
[2952.38 --> 2953.06] Let's just do it.
[2953.58 --> 2959.22] I think you would need your head examining if you wanted to run OpenShift at home just for a home workload, to be honest.
[2959.38 --> 2960.90] Don't you have OpenShift at home?
[2961.00 --> 2961.62] Come on.
[2961.86 --> 2963.14] No, I mean, I used to.
[2963.34 --> 2966.34] But then, I don't know, I just, I like my stuff working.
[2966.48 --> 2966.94] You know what I mean?
[2966.94 --> 2970.66] That says something about my abilities as an admin more than OpenShift.
[2972.72 --> 2979.48] Yeah, and probably my preference to have ButterFS on my Raspberry Pis than ZFS.
[2979.70 --> 2985.66] I've managed to make a career out of telling people how to install OpenShift and architect all the various different NCD nonsense.
[2986.22 --> 2989.72] As soon as the cluster's up and running, I'm kind of like, all right, that's your thing now.
[2990.48 --> 2992.56] Somebody else's problem at that point, right?
[2992.96 --> 2993.20] Yeah.
[2993.50 --> 2993.94] Exactly.
[2994.10 --> 2994.50] How do I get that gig?
[2994.58 --> 2995.80] That's what the SREs are for.
[2996.04 --> 2996.52] Yeah.
[2996.94 --> 2999.88] Thank you to our SREs, too.