Post 52583 by sleepythymes@occult.camp
 (DIR) More posts by sleepythymes@occult.camp
 (DIR) Post #52583 by sleepythymes@occult.camp
       2018-09-16T16:35:07Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       the Big Mood on mastodon is thinking that you could run your own instance better and moderate in a Perfect way but never coughing up the time/money to do so
       
 (DIR) Post #52602 by pea@fuckonthefirst.date
       2018-09-16T21:48:09.214221Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @sleepythymes the Big Mood on pleroma is everyone runs their own instance for 30 cents a month, just really poorly
       
 (DIR) Post #52645 by sleepythymes@occult.camp
       2018-09-16T21:49:50Z
       
       1 likes, 1 repeats
       
       @pea for just pennies a day,, you can get frustrated on the internet
       
 (DIR) Post #52668 by pea@fuckonthefirst.date
       2018-09-16T21:51:03.742273Z
       
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       @sleepythymes for a while i was running my instance for 8 cents a day, now it's more like 16-17
       
 (DIR) Post #52724 by sleepythymes@occult.camp
       2018-09-16T21:53:09Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @pea that's wild! i do wish there was a masto.host-like option for pleroma etc
       
 (DIR) Post #52730 by pea@fuckonthefirst.date
       2018-09-16T21:54:13.826536Z
       
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       @sleepythymes tbh i'm not super a fan of masto.host because it's sorta a Single Point Of Weakness for the fediverse in a lot of ways
       
 (DIR) Post #52758 by sleepythymes@occult.camp
       2018-09-16T21:55:27Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @pea that's fair but there really is a  technological skill gap. maybe someone could post videos for absolute noobs on peertube 😂
       
 (DIR) Post #52822 by scarlett@catgirl.science
       2018-09-16T21:59:00.874507Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @sleepythymes @pea I wrote a decent guide for installing pleroma that should show the process fairly completely,  including handling things like TLS certs, but the instructions are for NetBSD lol
       
 (DIR) Post #52842 by pea@fuckonthefirst.date
       2018-09-16T22:00:42.169237Z
       
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       @scarlett @sleepythymes I mean, easily one of the best OSes to install erlang/elixir-based software on
       
 (DIR) Post #52865 by scarlett@catgirl.science
       2018-09-16T22:00:46.090806Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @pea @sleepythymes can't tell if you're being serious here :thinknyan:
       
 (DIR) Post #52947 by pea@fuckonthefirst.date
       2018-09-16T22:09:17.921598Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @scarlett @sleepythymes (more of an opinion post than anything, but my experience shows me the BSDs are lot better for servers than Linux in most situations and NetBSD is very solid)(the erlang/elixir-based software part was specificity where it wasn't needed or applicable i suppose :p)
       
 (DIR) Post #52992 by pea@fuckonthefirst.date
       2018-09-16T22:11:58.747792Z
       
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       @scarlett @sleepythymes also, I'm not sure to what extent the "performance of the network stack" thing is still applicable with... FreeBSD and DragonflyBSD, was it? but I wouldn't be surprised if Elixir and/or Erlang would do a good job of taking advantage of that where some other solutions might choke out a little more :3
       
 (DIR) Post #53004 by pea@fuckonthefirst.date
       2018-09-16T22:12:20.598420Z
       
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       @scarlett @sleepythymes but that's just conjecture
       
 (DIR) Post #53021 by scarlett@catgirl.science
       2018-09-16T22:12:19.204561Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @pea erlang does use kqueue :)there's actually a bug relating to that though, which we're looking at. only applies to newer erlang versions, oddly