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Using ZFS on Proxmox for couple of years under different workloads (home servers, productions at job), it is very good.
Just tune it as you need :)
Well… You know… It’s kind of.
Go always with software RAID where possible to avoid vendor lock-in.
Just search for “amd hdmi 2.1 linux” to get full story.
In short - AMD wrote an implememtation for HDMI 2.1 standart for Linux driver, but it requires approval from HDMI consortium. They (consortium) denied it, so AMD couldn’t ship it.
I never said that it is a virtualization. Yet for easy understanding I named created namespaces “virtualized”. Here I mean “virtualized” = “isolated”. Systemd able to do that with every process btw.
Also, some “smart individuals” called comtainerization as type 3 hypervisors, that makes me laugh so hard :)
It virtualises only parts of operating system (namely processes and network namespaces with ability to passthru devices and mount points). It is still using host kernel, for example.
Take a look at HDMI versions in wikipedia and select cable accordingly.
Don’t go with “cheapest” advices as you might buy cable that only capable to FullHD@30Hz, which I think not what you want.
Also, if your card and TV have displayport I’ll suggest to go with that instead of HDMI. It just better and does not forbid open source realisations, like HDMI consortium does on HDMI 2.1.
Syncthing is a sync utility wich is different from a cloud service. They both have different purpose and are for different tasks.
They all do one thing - syncing files. And less painful implementation done by nextcloud, at least for me.
I’m using nextcloud for files and photos/videos sync from mobile, Joplin for notes and tasks, baikal for calendar (with sharing with my wife which using iOS/macOS).
There is nothing better than Nextcloud for files, I was trying to use syncthing and seafile - both sucks in one way or another.
Also, I was using vikunja for tasks but it’s UI and UX… Well, strange and not eye-candy. I hope someday they’ll rewrite it.
For me only the case of inability to reassemble RAID array on different server (with different controller or even without it) for data recovery shouts a big “NO” to any RAID controller at home lab.
While it is fun to have “industrial grade” thing, it isn’t fun to recover data from such arrays. Also, ZFS is a very good filesystem (imagine having 4.8 TB of data on 4 TB mirrored RAID. This is my case with zstd compression), but it isn’t playing well with RAID controllers. You’ll experience slowdowns and frequent data corruption.