HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

tehcopec

no profile record

comments

tehcopec
·anno scorso·discuss
Haha, that's awesome!
tehcopec
·anno scorso·discuss
I ran a bunch of workstations with Windows 7 for many years this way, also using the predecessor of PrimoCache with local SSDs with a cache. I had an OpenSolaris server for the backing storage with ZFS/COMSTAR.

I've been pretty much Linux only for the last ~15 years or so, but NVMe/TCP is so much faster. I would look at doing a secondary disk applications using NVMe/TCP once booted.
tehcopec
·2 anni fa·discuss
I've been using Deye since 2019. I was using those blue grid-tie inverters with limiters to do zero-export and they had the Deye manufacturers sticker on it. So I googled them, found them on Alibaba, and purchased some directly from them. I had no idea that they were related to Sol-Ark until later. Fortunately, I never trusted their dongle/cloud solution and so only ever plugged it in when I requested firmware updates from them.

I learned at some point that they were designed with Sol-Ark, and that Sol-Ark put pressure on them to stop selling to the U.S. market, and indeed they stopped selling to anyone directly in the U.S. I get Sol-Ark's position, but there are numerous people that bought them not even knowing the relation nor that they would be considered grey-market (since buying products direct from China is really common). Also, like pretty much everybody I know that screws around with this stuff, none of use would have paid for the Sol-Ark nor were we really aware of them because they so expensive anyways.

Even if this decision came purely from Deye, it's a direct result of Sol-Ark putting pressure on them to stop the sell of inverters into the U.S. market, and enough middle-men were getting around that, that they felt the need to do this.

Again, I get Sol-Ark's position, but it's just a really bad look for them. I think it's similar to certain media piracy: The people wouldn't have paid for it how you are offering it anyways, and all you're doing is making potential future customers hate you; It would certainly be more profitable to focus those resources on something else.
tehcopec
·2 anni fa·discuss
I’ve been using community edition JuiceFS with Percona XtraDB cluster for Metadata and MinIO multi-node for a couple of years for large archival and backup data storage. That setup has worked really well.