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[2234.24 --> 2238.76] I think there would be at most two streams happening concurrently, but for the most part,
[2239.06 --> 2239.90] probably one.
[2240.34 --> 2245.26] And there is a possibility to set up, you know, some storage.
[2245.78 --> 2249.20] Literally, I have a, the storage can live beside this Raspberry Pi.
[2249.20 --> 2253.66] So the possibility for some Ethernet networking to grab media is there as well.
[2253.74 --> 2255.82] So it doesn't necessarily need to be directly connected.
[2256.56 --> 2257.36] Oh, look at you.
[2257.54 --> 2258.16] Well, I know.
[2258.50 --> 2259.80] Now you're adding network storage.
[2260.30 --> 2261.02] It's complicated all of a sudden.
[2261.66 --> 2262.68] But totally doable.
[2263.04 --> 2268.36] And if you recall with the last time you and I tried Jellyfin, it was on a CM4.
[2268.66 --> 2268.98] Right.
[2269.22 --> 2272.06] And that worked really well, including the watch together stuff.
[2272.28 --> 2274.30] So it could be totally doable.
[2274.80 --> 2279.04] It'd probably be a quicker start on an x86 system, but not necessarily that much.
[2279.08 --> 2281.62] If you've got a USB disc, you could install Ubuntu LTS on.
[2281.70 --> 2285.56] You can just get the ISO and it's like installing it on a regular old PC.
[2286.14 --> 2287.06] It's pretty harmless.
[2287.26 --> 2292.00] Well, I think maybe the question then becomes, should I even bother with the Pi if I already
[2292.00 --> 2292.68] have a machine?
[2292.68 --> 2298.62] You know, an x86, granted, an old thing, but it's probably more performant than the Pi
[2298.62 --> 2299.06] easily.
[2299.80 --> 2300.10] And so...
[2300.10 --> 2300.46] Go for it.
[2300.68 --> 2301.62] Go for it, Brent.
[2301.64 --> 2301.80] Yeah.
[2301.88 --> 2302.12] All right.
[2302.16 --> 2302.92] No, go for it.
[2302.92 --> 2303.52] Just get going.
[2303.62 --> 2303.98] Get ripping.
[2304.30 --> 2304.56] Go crazy.
[2304.56 --> 2312.40] You know, because I often also, I have begun deploying stuff in a two-phased approach.
[2312.64 --> 2318.30] I set it up once and I make all my mistakes and then I tear it all down and I set it up
[2318.30 --> 2318.56] again.
[2319.26 --> 2320.16] And you know what?
[2320.18 --> 2323.06] That could be, maybe you set it up once on the x86 box.
[2323.14 --> 2324.38] You get a feel for how it works.
[2324.74 --> 2329.84] You get a feel for how to use the application, how to pass the different media through, you
[2329.84 --> 2330.72] know, Docker Compose.
[2331.06 --> 2335.08] And then, you know, you set it up on its permanent home later, which might be a Raspberry Pi
[2335.08 --> 2335.66] a couple of months.
[2335.82 --> 2339.60] It's surprising how often that temporary home becomes the permanent.
[2339.90 --> 2344.20] Like the desk I'm sat at right now, I built for our last house in the rental house.
[2344.20 --> 2345.66] So it was designed for that room.
[2345.66 --> 2350.72] And four years later, here I am still sat at the same desk in my own house.
[2352.64 --> 2353.80] You've made upgrades.
[2354.70 --> 2355.58] Oh yeah.
[2355.74 --> 2358.48] But it still doesn't quite fit the room.
[2359.12 --> 2361.94] You know, desk building is a hobby of mine.
[2362.00 --> 2367.84] If the audience doesn't know, I just love, I just love pulling all my neatly cable managed
[2367.84 --> 2370.36] setup out completely and rewiring all everything.
[2370.36 --> 2375.98] I don't know why, because I hate doing it sometimes, but do you take orders from you?
[2376.16 --> 2379.14] No, never shipping's too much.
[2380.18 --> 2380.80] All right.
[2380.80 --> 2382.60] So the challenge runs throughout January.
[2382.60 --> 2387.84] The next self-hosted, the one that we're recording right now as on December the 30th,
[2387.84 --> 2392.46] and then there'll be two episodes before the end of the challenge at the end of January.
[2392.46 --> 2396.60] So January the 27th will be our final conclusion episode.
[2398.28 --> 2399.66] I've got something neat for you.
[2399.74 --> 2405.76] Go to CrowdStrike.com slash LCE, and you can ingest and view all of your logs in one place.
[2405.94 --> 2408.22] So this is CrowdStrike Falcon LogScale.
[2408.42 --> 2413.18] This is CrowdStrike's new centralized log management and observability tool, formerly known as Humio.
[2413.18 --> 2422.00] So LogScale's been developed as an alternative to legacy logging solutions that really make it cost-prohibitive to ingest and search data volumes that you just kind of get.
[2422.36 --> 2428.92] If you've got some infrastructure, you know, more than a few systems, they just generate a ton of logs.
[2429.10 --> 2433.88] And the beauty of LogScale is that it can take logs from any of those sources and make them usable.
[2434.32 --> 2436.24] You don't need to constantly massage the format.
[2436.52 --> 2437.90] Oh, man, did I spend time doing that.
[2437.94 --> 2438.72] It doesn't need a schema.
[2438.90 --> 2439.82] Oh, yep, in there.
[2439.82 --> 2443.16] You just pump them all in there, and then you got them when you need them.
[2443.44 --> 2445.30] And the dashboard, yep, it's great.
[2445.40 --> 2445.92] It goes for days.
[2446.28 --> 2447.28] This platform is crazy.
[2448.06 --> 2458.12] It has an index-free architecture, which means you can ingest over a petabyte of data per day and search that with sub-second latency, not hours, sub-second latency.
[2459.06 --> 2466.90] And LogScale's a lot cheaper because that architecture means they don't have a whole big old hardware footprint, right?
[2466.90 --> 2470.78] They're a lot better than platforms like Splunk or Elastic, thanks to that.
[2470.88 --> 2472.82] A lot better for you to run, a lot easier, a lot simpler.
[2473.04 --> 2476.90] And they also have a community edition that they host.
[2477.00 --> 2479.88] Now, the reason why I like to mention this is there's a lot of ways you can do this.
[2480.12 --> 2492.08] You know, but I think one of the nice things about a platform like LogScale is if you're going through a period where you're building out your infrastructure, maybe you're troubleshooting something, you could pump those logs into LogScale Community Edition.
[2492.08 --> 2498.16] That is the largest no-cost data ingestion offering on the market, right?
[2498.68 --> 2504.76] Because LogScale Community Edition allows you to ingest up to 16 gigabytes a day, and you get seven days of retention.
[2504.76 --> 2506.64] So you can really watch what's going on.
[2506.68 --> 2508.46] There's no credit card required, no trial period.
[2508.80 --> 2509.50] You get that.
[2509.98 --> 2517.34] So you can try that, pump your logs into there, do your troubleshooting, build your infra, fix your problems, get it all in one spot on a dashboard.
[2517.34 --> 2526.00] It's just great for self-hosters who have a day job, and you want to get this stuff fixed, you want to enjoy it, you want to experiment with this, but you don't want a second job.
[2527.04 --> 2527.94] So go try it out.
[2527.98 --> 2529.12] It's a great way to support the show, too.
[2529.66 --> 2535.04] Get started with LogScale Community Edition for free at CrowdStrike.com slash LCE.
[2535.42 --> 2538.94] That's CrowdStrike.com slash LCE.
[2538.94 --> 2543.28] Well, happy holidays from the Matrix Project, everybody.
[2543.40 --> 2546.96] They're running out of money, and things are getting really, really bad over there.
[2547.02 --> 2557.06] In a blog post on Christmas, they write that a handful of initiatives have resulted in funding reaching the core Matrix team.
[2557.68 --> 2560.64] And as a result, this is directly putting core Matrix development at risk.
[2560.72 --> 2561.82] This is a quote from their blog.
[2562.38 --> 2562.74] They say,
[2562.74 --> 2592.62] In short, folks love the amazing decentralizing,
[2592.62 --> 2595.26] encrypted comms utopia of Matrix,