Framework Laptop (11th Gen Intel CPU) with Fedora 35
These are my notes on installing a brand new Framework Laptop (Batch 9) for a nephew of mine. It is the model with 11th Gen Intel Core.
These are my notes on installing a brand new Framework Laptop (Batch 9) for a nephew of mine. It is the model with 11th Gen Intel Core.
My existing Enigma2 receiver, a Dreamdbox DM900 UHD, has been replaced by a Vu+ Duo4K SE.
This is my braindump of the initial bringup.
This is my braindump on installing cephadm
on CentOS Stream 9.
While I use a QNAP TS-473A for my tests plus 2 VMs, the below applies to any machine or VM running CentOS Stream 9 FWIW: My installation and initial configuration is described in the post QNAP TS-473A with CentOS Stream 9.
In happy distro hopping, I installed CentOS Stream 9 on my QNAP TS-473A.
These are my installation notes. They are similar to my RHEL8 notes and my Fedora Server notes.
I want a playground for Ceph’s cephadm that was introduced with Octopus and is also present in Pacific.
So I cleanly took my QNAP TS-473A out of my existing Ceph Nautilus cluster again
(because I have enough combined capacity on my F5-422 nodes to be able to remove the OSDs in the TS-473A)
and installed Fedora Server 35 plus cephadm
from upstream.
I installed Fedora Server 35 on my QNAP TS-473A.
These are my installation notes. They are similar to my RHEL8 notes.
I got myself a Mountain keyboard, the Everest Max.
Since I had to boot Windows to set it up properly, here is my braindump on what I configured for my daily use with KDE Plasma on Fedora Linux.
I also noted my impressions, both positive and negative.
I added a QNAP TS-473 to my Red Hat Ceph Storage 4 (Nautilus) cluster.
This is my braindump.
I installed Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 on my QNAP TS-473A.
These are my installation notes.
I purchased a QNAP TS-473. This comes with a AMD Ryzen Embedded V1500B 4-core/8-thread @ 2.2 GHz CPU.
These are my notes from initial bringup.
As previously described, I had replaced the fans in my UniFi US-16-XG, but until today I had not put in any low noise adapters (LNA).
That changed today, I added two LNA NA-RC10 (8.3 m³/h, 12.2 dbA) because the switch is still the most noisy piece of equipment in my homelab.