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支出を切り詰めたいのに自作NASのマザボがやばそうなので
N100DC-ITXで置き換えることにした。ACアダプタのやつ。
今まで使ってたD525MWありがとう。10年以上前のマザボだよ。
予備で数個持っていて、不調のたびに消費してきたけど
そのつど新しいマザボに置き換えたほうが機能的にストレスなくて良いかもしれない。
D525MW遅すぎ。NASなのに。
OSはFreenasからXigmaNASにする。
Freenasはもうない。
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My EDC for Work
I mostly work remote now, but there's still some days that see me head back into the office. My EDC tends to vary depending on what's on my schedule.
Constants:
a Google Pixel 4XL w/ 128 GB in storage space. Basic comms, mobile file storage, music player, notes.
a Flipper Zero module, which is attached to my keychain and allows me to wipe and clone office-related RFID tags. It saves me on having to walk down to the locked and secured actual cloning machine, with Management having needed a while to come around to my using it. I also use it to control our conference room's projector, seeing as the actual remote is always misplaced. It lets me into my office and allows me to spook my non-tech-savvy EV-using colleagues seeing as Toyota doesn't individualize keyfob NFC signals. I also use it to control our garage door and to head inside the apartment. Oh, and it's also my dedicated IR remote for the media center.
two SanDisk Compact UltraFlash USB drives at 128 GB apiece. One is my Ventoy drive and is crammed with every single OS the office needs, from Linux Mint for the Call Centre to Windows Server 2020, as used by the Art and Production teams, with several variations in-between and a few bootable utilities, such as GParted, Hiren's Boot CD, FreeNAS and Proxmox. Both of them are molded to my keychain using little Sugru putty hoops. The Executive pool being beyond all salvation, I also pack a hacked Windows 11 image file that I've modded to be just a little bit more flexible than the commonplace Tiny11 ISO that's accessible online. Allowing sixteen year-old computers running on spinning rust to function off of a modern operating system has at least allowed us to acclimate the older ends of the Accounting department to modern standards. Unlike the actual Tiny11 ISO, I've kept the authentication suite because y'can't really run homebrew Windows images in an office setting legally if the resulting installation can't phone home...
Admin Days:
my Razer Blade 14 laptop and its associated dongles, running off of Windows 11 Pro. I edit campaign-related documents, review project files and sign off on our dealers having fully-assembled digital care packages packed with everything they'll need to get their sales off the ground. I also confirm the proper placement of documents that will need to be accessible for our Printing associates later. Everything IT takes place there, except for what relates to the Call Center. My laptop allows me to Term into our four server stacks if our checklists detect that something's missing, and to visually report on what needs to be transferred. To do all this, I also pack...
a TP-Link USB-C to RJ45 adapter, which is foldable and takes about zero space in my laptop's bag. It works like any other built-in hardline access point.
a no-name collapsible Cat5 Ethernet cable
a small bean bag. This one actually stays in-office, but I take it out from underneath my desk when I know I'll be watching the local network or mothering file transfers for more than twenty minutes. I am not spending half-an-hour standing up in the hot aisle, no sir.
Call Centre Admin Days:
my 512 GB Steam Deck. It's a couch gaming platform at home and a Linux Terming station at work. Going Linux-to-Linux is much more intuitive for me than loading Windows' Linux tools, seeing as it gives me a complete GUI I can use to guide less computer-savvy call agents through common procedures. It virtualizes a barebones-basic Linux Mint install that I can boot up and peer through if some colleagues report weird bugs or VoIP-specific issues, and I can use it for remote takeovers if things get too complex and require that I actually dig in to fix an issue.
my Steelseries Arctis 9 headset and USB emitter. I'm technically obligated to use wired audio peripherals at work, but Management soon realized I had too many side-jobs to take care of at work to really make the use of anything wired practical on the long term. They're plugged in if I have to lend a hand and make a few calls, but typically operate wirelessly. Everyone at the office knows to ping me on 3CX if I'm working within range of my desk, and to text or message me if I'm not.
On-Site Implementation:
my Google Pixel Slate. This old croaker's really useful when I'm dealing with non-tech-savvy salespersons who need a walkthrough of a campaign's documents or who want a demo run of some of our VR and WebGL content offers. It's a decent notepad on its own, and it comes with its own dongles. It's the PC I'll use to access any dealer's infrastructure and confirm with their Sales Director and Financial Controller that everything's above-board and ready to go.
That last one is the least-frequent of my tasks, seeing as Management knows not to send a cripple halfway across the province on his own. They let me implement campaign materials and check for head offices' go-ahead only for local dealerships, some colleagues of Walt's are scattered across the province for the rest.
All of that sort of informs why I took the Brain Gremlin as a persona, as I'm technically able to crater the company that employs me if I so desired, and could do so during personal or business-related trips.
Failing that, I get to fuck around with our presenting hardware if I'm bored, I can wreak havoc with my fellow geeks' radio-powered desktop toys, and have been known to pull an April Fools on my boss by using my Flipper Zero to put his shelf-mounted radio receiver on his least-liked station without opening the door.
FAQ:
WHY U NO USE LINUX ON LAPPY?
Because Razer are incompetent buffoons that long ago made it clear they had no vested interest in supporting the use of Open Source operating systems, and who made it a requirement to use Windows Update in order to get absolutely anything to work on the Razer Blade 14.
If it's any consolation, I use WSL to run Kali Linux on top of my Windows 11 install on my laptop. The way it's set up, you'd swear it's just a productivity and light gaming machine up until I mouse over to and click on a blank spot in the upper border. Kali's own GUI then drops down.
As to why I'd want to attack or breach my own employer's resources? Having an in-house pen-tester is a lot cheaper in this economy.
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FreeNAS Free Operating System For PC
FreeNAS Free Operating System For PC
FreeNAS is an operating system that can be installed on virtually any hardware platform to share data over a network. The app is the simplest way to create a centralized and easily accessible place for your data. Use this Free Operating System with ZFS to protect, store, and back up all of your data. It is used everywhere, for the home, small business, and the enterprise.
This is a practical and…
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#attached storage#free operating system#FreeNAS OS#freenas os download#NAS Server#NFS Protocol#privacy-protection#server os#storage os#system-optimization
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How To Install FreeNAS 11.3 Storage OS in VMware Workstation (2020) Late...
#freenas os#freenas storage server#freenas vs truenas#server os#freenas storage turotial#freenas os latest version#freenas 11.3#freenas 11.2#abuchutech
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Hexadecimal!!!
OK my Technically Versed Friends, I need help. I'l still trying to build my home server, "Hexadecimal", and I've run into something I simply cannot understand.
The goal was to use Ubuntu Server 18.04.3 64Bit (most recent ISO). It would boot off USB stick (though barking about ACPI ERROR AE NOT FOUND), install OK, then on reboot... Hang at VERIFYING DMI POOL.
Ubuntu Server 16.04.6 did pretty much the same thing, as did FreeNAS 11.2-U7. Two different drives (SSD & Traditional platter). BIOS changes to HD Mode (IDE, AHCI), HD SMART (ON / OFF), and Mem Speed (~1300 Mhz) made no change. (Actually Desktop is happy with mem at full 1600 speed.) Different SATA ports also tried.
BUT! Throw Ubuntu DESKTOP 18.04.3 64Bit at it.... and it'll HAPPILY reboot and run the system!
So, I have two questions:
1) What could be stopping the system with the server OS?
2) Do I really NEED the server OS to make it work as a server?
== TECH SPECS ==
CPU - AMD FX-4300
MoBo - Gigabyte GA-78LMT-USB3 V5 (2nd board)
Mem - 2 @ 8GB PNY DDR3 1600
HD1 - PNY 120GB SSD SATA
HD2 - WD 160GB SATA
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HPE ProLiant MicroServer Gen10 Plus NAS Server for Business, Intel Xeon E-2224 3.4GHz, 32GB RAM, 8TB Storage, RAID, FreeNAS OS
HPE ProLiant MicroServer Gen10 Plus NAS Server for Business, Intel Xeon E-2224 3.4GHz, 32GB RAM, 8TB Storage, RAID, FreeNAS OS
Price: (as of – Details) HP ProLiant MicroServer Gen10 Plus NAS Server Processors: Intel Xeon E-2224 Quad-Core 3.4GHz 8MB CPU, Up To 4.6GHz Turbo Memory:32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 PC4-21300 2666MHz Unbuffered Memory Storage: 8TB (4 x 2TB) 7.2K 6Gb/s SATA 3.5″ HDDs RAID Controller: HP Smart Array S100i SR Gen10 Power: Single Power Supply Connectivity: Onboard Quad Port 1GbE NICOperating System: FreeNAS…

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#32GB#34GHz#8TB#Business#computer server#E2224#FreeNAS#Gen10#HPE#Intel#MicroServer#NAS#Proliant#RAID#RAM#server#Storage#Xeon
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mac
掲示板やまとめサイトを見てると定期的にmac上げスレが立つのだが、どうもmac上げしている人の用途はかなり限定的な印象がある。おおまかに言って①ソフトウェア開発者、②映像・画像系クリエイター、③ネットと文書作成程度しかしない人、の3パターンくらいであろうか。
①についてはいろいろ疑問がある。そもそもソフトウェア開発といってもサーバ用、クライアント用、フリーソフト、スマホ用などいろいろある。
業務用のサーバならLinuxサーバかWindowsサーバだろう。Linux上で動かすソフトウェアの開発はmacでもできるだろうが、ガチのLinux開発者は開発機もLinux使ってることが多いのでは。Windowsサーバ上のソフトウェアは普通Windowsで使ってると思ってたがmacで作る人っているのか。
クライアント上のアプリケーションとしては、mac用ソフトはmacで開発するだろうし、Windows用ソフトはWindows上で開発するだろう。Linux用ソフトはLinux派かmac派で分かれるかもしれない。
フリーソフトに関しても似たようなものだろう。ただmac用のフリーソフトはあまり見かけないのはなぜだろうか。
iOS用アプリの開発がmac上でやりやすいという話なら、同じ会社だから当然だ。androidアプリがどうなのかは知らん。
②は伝統的にmacがクリエイター用アプリが強かったので、現在もその影響が残っている。ただ、DAWはむしろ逆転しており、Windowsのほうが充実している。映像系はmacとWindowsで差がなくなってきた。画像、ことに漫画系はmacというよりiPadが強いが、これはハードウェア的な完成度の高さゆえであろう。
③のユーザーは単純なライトユーザーであり、あまり詳しくない人である。マニアックな使い方をしないならUI的に優れたmacを使うというのは理解できる。
しかし、自分の個人的な用途で言えば、macではできないことが多い。OSレベルで言えば、設定のいじり方に相当な違いがある。Windowsは大半の設定がコントロールパネルからいじれるようになっている。MSはWindows8あたりからコンパネの代わりに「設定」でいじる方向に変更しようとしているが、これは迷惑極まりない。コンパネは今のまま維持してほしい。一方でmacのGUIで設定できる範囲は限られており、細かいところをいじろうと思うとスクリプトを直接いじる必要がある。少し突っ込んだ変更をしようとすると途端にハードルが上がる。昔からmacに中級者がいないと言われてきたのはそういうところに原因があるのではないか。
これについてはかつて掲示板で「選択肢をなくしてわかりやすくするのがmac」と言われていて、なるほどと思った。つまりカスタムできないようにして選択肢を縛ることで、初心者にとっては使いやすく見えるというわけだ。それに慣れてしまうとWindowsのカスタム性が使いにくく見えるというわけである。
また、アプリケーションでもmacでできないことはけっこうある。
オーディオで言えば、無料のDSD再生/配信ソフトが少ない。メーカー製のDSDプレーヤーは概ねWin用もmac用もあるが、たとえばSonyのmusic centerのようにWindows用しかないものもある。また、foobar2000のようにカスタムできるフリーソフトがmacにはない。
ゲームで言えば、SteamなどのPCゲームは大半がWindows専用である。エロゲはmacで動くものはほとんど存在しない。VRもWindowsの独壇場だ。iPhoneでできるよと言ってるやつはVRchatやバーチャルキャストを知らないのだろうか。スマホVRなど比較対象にもならない。
また、うちはテレビをnasneで録画しているのだが、nasneはWindowsPCかPSかスマホからしか操作できないし、BD-Rに焼く場合にはWindowsしか選択肢がない。
録画サーバも運用しているが、私はUbuntu上で動かしている(組み直す際にCentOSにするつもりだったが、CentOSがあのザマだったので使い慣れたUbuntuにした)。macでもdocker使えばやってやれないことはないのだろうが、まだ試験レベルである。
他にもうちではNASを2台運用しているが、いずれもFreeBSDベースのFreeNASである。WindowsでもNASは簡単に作れるが、macでNASを作るのはよほどの酔狂であろう。
そもそも自分が使っているデスクトップやNASやサーバはすべて自作なのだが、自作の時点でmacは選択肢に入らない。
そんなわけなので、自分の用途としてはmacのほうができないことが多い。ただ、クリエイターなど限られた用途に特化した場合には、ハードウェアの完成度と、選択肢を縛ってわかりやすくしたUIのおかげで使いやすいというのが実態ではなかろうか。
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2D Editing Krita OpenToonz Irfanview Gimp Pixlr Inkscape Paint.net Medibang
3D editing FreeCAD Blender Magicavoxel Makehuman Fusion 360 Sketchup Solidworks / inventor (students only)
Video Editing DaVinci Resolve Handbrake SFM Source film maker Lightworks
Video Player VLC SMPlayer Kodi Plex Potplayer IINA (for macOS only)
Physics Simulation Algodoo
Streaming OBS Streamlabs OBS
Audibook / e-book Chapter and Verse Calibre
Networking FreeNAS pfSense OpenVPN nmap
Compression 7zip
Code Editor VS Code Notepad++ Vim Sublime Text Atom Intellij IDEA
Office Libreoffice
Audio Musescore Audacity
OS / infrastructure Apache Linux Ninite
Browser Firefox Chrome Brave
VM Virtualbox Proxmox
Torrent QBittorrent Sonarr Radarr Sabnzbd
Maps Google Maps Google Earth Openstreetmap
Languages R Python
Game Engines Unity Unreal Engine Godot
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Archer 15-1263 Manual

Good day Experts I purchased myself an Iomega Media Network Hard drive a while ago. As Murphy's Law goes the hard drive has subsequently failed on me and it is out of its warranty. I have gone out and purchased a new drive to replace the faulty one. After doing so and connection drive NAS drive up to the network, it doesn’t seem to find anything.
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I went and a bit of research and due to the fact that the new drive doesn’t have an “OS “ / firmware installed on, it doesn’t pick it up. I would have thought that the “OS” / firmware would be installed on a chip on the chassis somewhere instead of it being on the hard drive itself.
Anyway, this brings me to my question. I would like to be able to “revive” my Iomega Media Network Hard Drive. What will I require to do so? Please see below link for reference to my drive. It doesn’t necessarily have to be the same “OS” / firmware as before, anything will do. I would like to just get the chassis working again on my LAN.
Thank you in advance for any assistance in this matter. Kind regards, Arno. Hi SysExpert Thank you for your post. Leica wild t2 manual woodworkers. I managed to get as far as what you did with Iomega themselves. I even got the GPL Open Source Code (below link).
Jan 03, 2012 This tutorial uses unsupported features of the IOMEGA Storcenter ix4-200d. It worked for me but use it at your own risk! It should work (again, it is. View and Download Iomega StorCenter Pro NAS 150d manual online. StorCenter Pro NAS 150d Server pdf manual download. Aug 31, 2012 Can FreeNAS be installed on an external Iomega NAS drive? The IOMEGA alreday has some torrent software running on it but I want to. Install FreeNAS onto Iomega nAS?
However, after downloading it, I have no idea of getting it onto the drive and to make it work. With regards to getting a duplicate drive to make an image; I borrowed my friends drive, which is the same as mine and was kind enough to let me open up his chassis and connect it to my PC.
However upon doing this, Windows could not pick the drive up. It seems to be formatted differently. So I got to another dead-end. Any further suggestions from anyone else please? Ciao mustekkzn.
If you want to image the entire physical disk drive, then this an be done with any software package capable of performing a bit-level copy of the entire disk drive. The software doesn't care what is on the disk, all it sees are 1s and 0s. However, the problem is more complicated, so you need to specifically tell us what you desire. If you clone a disk, do you want to put the clone in the appliance and expect it to work? At very least the serial number won't match, so the firmware in the system will have to deal with a foreign disk which may or may not work in the first place. HI dlethe I see what you mean; in my personal opinion I dont think I wil be able to clone/image these drives. As I mentioned before I connected my friends drive up and Windows could not detect his drive.
I think its due to the fact it is running Linux. As per your previous post. I have to be honest, I didnt try and play any further with the drive, a specially after seeing that Windows did not pick it up. Do you think I would be able to clone these drives using Acronis in Windows? With regards to my last post, do you think I could use something like FreeNas or anytihng simular. My goal is to 'recycle' my Iomega chassis with new internal hard drive and to be able to use it as n NAS device again. Thank you very much for your assistance in this matter.
Kind regards, mustekkzn. You can clone the disks with any software package that does a bit-level copy. There is no magic at all. This is no different then cloning a disk drive that has windows and another non-windows partition You are free to stick this disk drive in any computer running linux, windows, Mac OS, FreeNas, whatever. It is formatted to standard 512-bytes/sector. I do not use acronis, but if it has a bit-level copy for entire disk, then it will clone the drive.

Otherwise some freebies like clonezilla or the runtime product that another expert suggested will work. Just thought to give you guys an update. I started off trying to use Ghost image the two drives, however, I straight away had a problem identifying which drive is which and I didn’t want to run the risk of overwriting my friends drive. With that said, I moved over to Acronis, which was easier to distinguish which drive is which. However, it took forever to do. Upon completing the drive still didn’t work, it has to be something to do with serial numbers or something as per previous post. I will have to admit defeat on this as I can’t be spending any more time on this.
I will just have to use this drive as a standard hard drive then. Before I end off, I would like to just confirm if anyone else has used FreeNas and if they would know if it will work in my scenario.
Kind regards, mustekkzn.
This tutorial uses unsupported features of the IOMEGA Storcenter ix4-200d. It worked for me but use it at your own risk! It should work (again, it is unsupported) on the ix2 Storcenter as well. Tutorial tested on IOMEGA Storcenter ix4-200d firmware 3.1.14.995 The aim of the tutorial is to be able to add programs to you NAS without having to go too deep in the system. This is also helpful to compile natively on the NAS without needing to cross compile for your architecture. SSH into your NAS See my other post: 2.
Directory Structure on the NAS The Lifeline OS (Iomega's OS) does put most of the root file system in read only mode. It is not much use to try to put stuff there anyway because the partitition is very small You can type: df Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on rootfs 45548 12% / /dev/root.old 6613 2119 4494 33% /initrd none 45548 12% / /dev/md0vg/BFDlv 41 16% /boot /dev/loop0 524 6953 99% /mnt/apps /dev/loop1 4959 2230 2473 48% /etc /dev/loop2 216 216 0 100% /oem tmpfs 255748 0 255748 0% /mnt/apps/lib/init/rw tmpfs 255748 0 255748 0% /dev/shm /dev/mapper/md0vg-vol1 16774 20% /mnt/system /dev/mapper/2602b0cevg-lv43ec31bd 41% /mnt/pools/A/A0 to see the partitions and their mountpoint. The idea seems to be that third party programs should be installed in the /opt/ directory, which has ample storage (16GB) whereas root (/) only has 50MB. Use ipkg ipkg is intalled by default in the Iomega storcenter. We just need to specify the right place to find the packages: vi /etc/ipkg.conf src cross src cross Then type: ipkg update to build the list of available packages. The problem of this setup is that you won't be able to install some packages because installation will fail because part of the filesystem is readonly. Thanks to ipkg, there is an easy fix: ipkg install ipkg-opt This installs the binary /opt/bin/ipkg-opt.
The idea is then to use this binary instead of the regular ipkg: as a result all packages will be installed in /opt/ and you won't run into problems with the read only filesystem. The only drawback is that /opt/bin/ is not in your path. There is a simple remedy for that: PATH=/opt/bin:$PATH Note: this is not persistent (if you start another shell, you will need to do that again). Also, as a one time persistent thing, I recommand to do vi /etc/ld.so.conf and add /opt/lib/ at the end. That's the main problem with /opt installed software: you might end up to get duplicated libraries between /lib and /opt/lib (ldd and ldconfig are your friends).
You also need to do: mv /opt/etc/ipkg.conf /opt/etc/ipkg.conf.old ln -s /etc/ipkg.conf /opt/etc/ipkg.conf so that you config in /etc/ipkg.conf remains useable with /opt/bin/ipkg and /opt/bin/ipkg-opt Then type: /opt/bin/ipkg update to setup the list of available packages for /opt/bin/ipkg /opt/bin/ipkg-opt 4. Install utilities and optware-devel First install the utilities you miss to do some actual linux stuff: ipkg-opt install zip unzip bzip2 gzip If you want a full gcc toolchain to compile your own applications from source. Ipkg-opt install optware-devel The compilation can be slow but this allows you to natively compile on your NAS (I think it is simpler because there is no need to set up cross compiling on another box).
Install armel/debian compiled software Unfortunately, you will soon discover that some of the packages you want are not available for ipkg. You can then either compile your own software (see next point) or get some ready-made debian archives. In this case, I suggest to use the following command (for example for libsigc-2.0-dev): cd /opt/tmp/ wget dpkg -instdir=/opt/ -admindir=/opt/dpkg/ -i libsigc-2.0-dev2.0.18-2armel.deb Note: do not use /tmp/ as the space available there is very small.
Note2: be careful to choose packages compiled for your architecture (armel in my case)! The above command will install your soft as if /opt/ was the root directory (you will end up with /opt/usr/lib directories and the like). As a result, you might need to add stuff in your PATH or edit /etc/ld.so.conf. Be careful not to make a mess of your system or you will soon end up with several times the same library (with different versions) at different locations.
You will need to sort this manually(ln, rm.) 6. Compile from source For example, a very classic install for libnfnetlink: cd /opt/tmp/ wget tar -xvf libnfnetlink-1.0.0.tar.bz2 cd libnfnetlink-1.0.0 PATH=$PATH:/opt/bin./configure -prefix=/opt/ make make install Note: to get bzip2 to work I had to do before the tar -xvf: ln -s /opt/bin/bzip2-bzip2 /opt/bin/bzip2 Another example using svn cd /opt/tmp/ PAH=/opt/bin:$PATH svn checkout xmlrpc-c cd xmlrpc-c/./configure -prefix=/opt make make install Don't forget the -prefix=/opt to specifiy you want to install your package.

When compiling from source, you run into the usual complation problems you can get with linux (libraries/includes not found etc.). It gets even more annoying because default stuff does not work well anymore (package manager is not where expected etc), and sometimes you end up having to specify the complie flags yourself. For example, I recently had to edit the configure script of a source tarball to add: sigcLIBS='-L/opt/lib/ -lsigc-2.0 -L/lib/' sigcCFLAGS='-I/opt/usr/include/sigc-2.0/ -I/opt/usr/lib/sigc-2.0/include -I/opt/include/ncurses' libcurlLIBS='-L/opt/lib/ -lcurl' libcurlCFLAGS='-I/opt/include/' libtorrentLIBS='-L/opt/lib/ -ltorrent' libtorrentCFLAGS='-I/opt/include/' -dev packages can be difficult to find with ipkg, this is where you often need to get a.deb package or compile the library from source just to get the header files right. Conclusion As you noticed, it is just a matter of using the tools (and using them right). It just gets a little bit more complicated because the usual package manager does not work out of the box, the procedure is unsupported by the hardware vendor and precompiled packages can be difficult to find for armel.
Iomega Storcenter Pro 150d
Actually, I may have an interest in the package so I looked into it a bit. In this case, you can run: /opt/bin/ipkg-opt files sabnzbdplus after installing. You'll see that the soft is in: /opt/share/SABnzbd# do cd /opt/share/SABnzbd./SABnzbd.py -s 0.0.0.0:8080 to start you need to put 0.0.0.0 so that the web service can be accessed from other computers (it is just accessible locally otherwise). Then, point your browser to or even you might want to look at: for the startup scripts and Sickbeard/Couchpotato install. Johan wget -passive-ftp -P /tmp/ -2012-05-18 14:52:00- Resolving ipkg.nslu2-linux.org.
140.211.169.161 Connecting to ipkg.nslu2-linux.org 140.211.169.161 :80. HTTP request sent, awaiting response. 200 OK Length: 517504 (505K) text/plain Saving to: `/tmp/Packages' 100% 517,504 387K/s in 1.3s 2012-05-18 14:52:03 (387 KB/s) - `/tmp/Packages' saved 504 Johan.
I suppose you have an IOMEGA storcenter. Did you look at my tutorial:?
You need to add your command to /opt/init-opt.sh to have it start automatically at boot. Rc2.d is not run at boot in an IOMEGA storcenter. All the config files have to be in /opt: most of the file system is cleaned/refreshed on reboot. Where were the files that are gone? Are you saying that /opt/bin/unzip is gone?
Iomega Storcenter Ix2-200
Archer 15-1263 Manual Installation
If you are just typing unzip at the invite, make sure /opt/bin is in the PATH (to do that, PATH=$PATH:/opt/bin). I don't have unrar on my system, but I guess the problem is the same.
Anonymous Thanks, another problem occured after the tut. From 1) after editing the sohoprocs the ix4 wont but up anymore and hangs on 75%. I can restore from usb stick and it wil work again. Tried it several times now als i with other firmware but stil crashes at 75%.
3) where exactly do i put the path command? If i do this in cosole and i close the console, the patch is gone after reboot. 2)if the path is set, the programs wil work. But settings still wont be saved.
The files are in /opt/. I'am just looking into linux the past 2 days, its al new to me. Finally i decided what i want to do with my ix2, but i am somehow stuck. I am trying to set up a mysql server. So far i have been able to install it and i copied the startup-script to /etc/init.d/mysql.server update-rc.d mysql.server defaults created the correct symlinks, calling the script manually /etc/init.d/mysql.server start starts the server just fine, but booting won't. /opt/bin is not added to PATH either, but the script should do it by PATH=/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin:/opt/bin:$PATH Any ideas what causes this? Starting the Server manually works, but doing so manually everyday (tiny appartement, NAS is shut down over night) can't be the only solution.
Archer 15-1276 Manual
Anonymous Hi Vince, Please can you help me? I'm trying to install openjdk-6-jre-headless, openjdk-6-jre, openjdk-6-jdk following your clue but I'm receiving the following error: root@ix2-200:/var/cache/apt/archives# dpkg -instdir=/opt/ -admindir=/opt/dpkg/ -i openjdk-6-jre6b18-1.8.13-0+squeeze2armel.deb (Reading database. Dpkg: serious warning: files list file for package `openjdk-6-jre-headless' missing, assuming package has no files currently installed. Dpkg: serious warning: files list file for package `openjdk-6-jre' missing, assuming package has no files currently installed. 24210 files and directories currently installed.) Preparing to replace openjdk-6-jre 6b18-1.8.13-0+squeeze2 (using openjdk-6-jre6b18-1.8.13-0+squeeze2armel.deb). Dpkg (subprocess): unable to execute new pre-installation script: No such file or directory dpkg: error processing openjdk-6-jre6b18-1.8.13-0+squeeze2armel.deb (-install): subprocess pre-installation script returned error exit status 2 dpkg (subprocess): unable to execute new post-removal script: No such file or directory dpkg: error while cleaning up: subprocess post-removal script returned error exit status 2 Errors were encountered while processing: openjdk-6-jre6b18-1.8.13-0+squeeze2armel.deb Regards, Pierre.
I can't get past the last part of step 3. I don't have the cloud edition. Its a problem with libidn.so.11? Can I install this manually? Root@NAS:/# /opt/bin/ipkg update Downloading wget: error while loading shared libraries: libidn.so.11: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory An error ocurred, return value: 1. Collected errors: ipkgdownload: ERROR: Command failed with return value 127: `wget -passive-ftp -q -P /opt/ipkg-ExgmfJ root@NAS:/# ipkg-opt install optware-devel Installing optware-devel (6.8-10) to root. Downloading wget: error while loading shared libraries: libidn.so.11: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory Nothing to be done An error ocurred, return value: 22.
Collected errors: ipkgdownload: ERROR: Command failed with return value 127: `wget -passive-ftp -q -P /opt/ipkg-o9cx3g Failed to download optware-devel. Perhaps you need to run 'ipkg update'?
Archer 15-1263 Manual Pdf
Anonymous hi guy, I have a similar problem that: AQuablogMarch 30, 2013 at 6:57 PM at the stage: '4. Install utilities and optware-devel'. An error ocurred, return value: 22. Collected errors: ipkgdownload: ERROR: Command failed with return value 127: `wget -passive-ftp -q -P /opt/ipkg-zA0d3x Failed to download libidn. Perhaps you need to run 'ipkg update'? - I try to fixe it with: ipkg install libidn but it doesn't work: root@storage:/# ipkg install libidn Installing libidn (1.25-1) to root. Downloading wget: error while loading shared libraries: libidn.so.11: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory Nothing to be done An error ocurred, return value: 22.
Collected errors: ipkgdownload: ERROR: Command failed with return value 127: `wget -passive-ftp -q -P /opt/ipkg-qWMRlA Failed to download libidn. Perhaps you need to run 'ipkg update'? Root@storage:/# do you have an idea? Have a nice day.

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30 Widely Used Open Source Software
Suggested Reading Time: 10 min
Copyright belongs to Xiamen University Malaysia Open Source Community Promotion Group (for Community Service course)
*WeChat Public Account: XMUM_OSC
It is undeniable that open source technology is widely use in business. Companies who lead the trend in IT field, such as Google and Microsoft, accept and promote using open source software. Partnerships with companies such as MongoDB, Redis Labs, Neo4j, and Confluent of Google Cloud are good examples of this.
Red Hat, the originator of linux, the open source company, firstly launched an investigation into the “The State of Enterprise Open Source” and released the investigation report on April 16, 2019. This report is a result of interviews with 950 IT pioneers around the world. The survey areas include the United States, the United Kingdom, Latin America, and the Asia-Pacific region, aiming to understand corporate open source profiles in different geographic regions.
Does the company believe that open source is of strategic significance? This is the question that Red Hat first raised and most wanted to understand. The survey results show that the vast majority of 950 respondents believe that open source is of strategic importance to the company's overall infrastructure software strategy. Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst said at the beginning of the survey report, “The most exciting technological innovation that has occurred in this era is taking shape in the open source community.”
Up to now, the investigation has continued to the third round, and the results have been published on February 24, 2021.
Some of the most open source projects favored by IT companies. These are mainly enterprise-oriented application software projects, covering several categories such as web servers, big data and cloud computing, cloud storage, operating systems, and databases.
Web Servers: Nginx, Lighttpd, Tomcat and Apache
1. Nginx
Nginx (engine x) is a high-performance HTTP and reverse proxy web server developed by the Russians. It also provides IMAP/POP3/SMTP services. Its characteristics are that it occupies less memory and has strong concurrency. The concurrency of Nginx performs better in the same type of web server. Many people use Nginx as a load balancer and web reverse proxy.
Supported operating systems: Windows, Linux and OS X.
Link: http://nginx.org/
2. Lighttpd
Lighttpd is a lightweight open source web server software whose fundamental purpose is to provide a safe, fast, compatible and flexible web server environment specifically for high-performance websites. It has the characteristics of very low memory overhead, low cpu occupancy rate, good performance and abundant modules. It is widely used in some embedded web servers.
Supported operating systems: Windows, Linux and OS X
Link: https://www.lighttpd.net/
3. Tomcat
Tomcat server is a free and open source Web application server, which is a lightweight application server, mainly used to run JSP pages and Servlets. Because Tomcat has advanced technology, stable performance, and free of charge, it is loved by Java enthusiasts and recognized by some software developers, making it a popular Web application server.
Supported operating systems: Windows, Linux and OS X
Link: https://tomcat.apache.org/
4. Apache HTTP Server
Apache HTTP Server (Apache for short) is an open source web server of the Apache Software Foundation. It can run on most computer operating systems. Because of its cross-platform and security, it has been widely used since 1996. The most popular Web server system on the Internet since the beginning of the year. It is said that 55.3% of all websites are currently supported by Apache.
Supported operating systems: Windows, Linux and OS X
Link: https://httpd.apache.org/
Big Data and Cloud Computing: Hadoop、Docker、Spark、Storm
5. Hadoop
Hadoop is a distributed system infrastructure developed by the Apache Foundation. It is recognized as a set of industry big data standard open source software, which provides massive data processing capabilities in a distributed environment. Almost all mainstream vendors focus on Hadoop development tools, open source software, commercial tools, and technical services. Hadoop has become the standard framework for big data.
Supported operating systems: Windows, Linux and OS X
Link: http://hadoop.apache.org/
6. Docker
Docker is an open source application container engine. Developers can package their own applications into containers, and then migrate to docker applications on other machines, which can achieve rapid deployment and are widely used in the field of big data. Basically, companies that do big data will use this tool.
Supported operating systems: Windows, Linux and OS X
Link: https://www.docker.com/
7. Spark
Apache Spark is a fast and universal computing engine designed for large-scale data processing. Spark is similar to the general parallel framework of Hadoop MapReduce. Apache Spark claims, "It runs programs in memory up to 100 times faster than Hadoop MapReduce and 10 times faster on disk. Spark is better suited for data mining and machine learning algorithms that require iterative MapReduce.
Supported operating systems: Windows, Linux and OS X
Link: http://spark.apache.org/
8. Storm
Storm is a Twitter open source distributed real-time big data processing system, which is called the real-time version of Hadoop by the industry. As more and more scenarios cannot tolerate the high latency of Hadoop's MapReduce, such as website statistics, recommendation systems, early warning systems, financial systems (high-frequency trading, stocks), etc., big data real-time processing solutions (stream computing) The application is becoming more and more extensive, and it is now the latest breaking point in the field of distributed technology, and Storm is the leader and mainstream in stream computing technology.
Supported operating systems: Windows, Linux and OS X
Link: https://storm.apache.org/
9. Cloud Foundry
Cloud Foundry is the industry's first open source PaaS cloud platform. It supports multiple frameworks, languages, runtime environments, cloud platforms and application services, enabling developers to deploy and expand applications in a few seconds without worrying about anything Infrastructure issues. It claims to be "built by industry leaders for industry leaders," and its backers include IBM, Pivotal, Hewlett-Packard Enterprise, VMware, Intel, SAP and EMC.
Supported operating systems: Independent of operating system
Link: https://www.cloudfoundry.org/
10. CloudStack
CloudStack is an open source cloud computing platform with high availability and scalability, as well as an open source cloud computing solution. It can accelerate the deployment, management, and configuration of highly scalable public and private clouds (IaaS). Using CloudStack as the foundation, data center operators can quickly and easily create cloud services through the existing infrastructure.
Supported operating systems: Independent of operating system
Link: https://www.cloudfoundry.org/
11. OpenStack
OpenStack is an open source cloud computing management platform project, a combination of a series of software open source projects. It is an authorized open source code project developed and initiated by NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) and Rackspace. OpenStack provides scalable and elastic cloud computing services for private clouds and public clouds. The project goal is to provide a cloud computing management platform that is simple to implement, scalable, rich, and standardized. This very popular cloud computing platform claims that "hundreds of big brands in the world" rely on it every day.
Supported operating systems: Independent of operating system
Link: https://www.openstack.org/
Cloud Storage: Gluster, FreeNAS, Lustre, Ceph
12. Gluster
GlusterFS is a highly scalable and scalable distributed file system suitable for data-intensive tasks such as cloud storage and media streaming. All standard POSIX interfaces are implemented, and fuse is used to realize virtualization, making users look like local disks. Able to handle thousands of clients.
Supported operating system: Windows and Linux
Link: https://www.gluster.org/
13. FreeNAS
FreeNAS is a set of free and open source NAS servers, which can turn an ordinary PC into a network storage server. The software is based on FreeBSD, Samba and PHP, supports CIFS (samba), FTP, NFS protocols, Software RAID (0,1,5) and web interface setting tools. Users can access the storage server through Windows, Macs, FTP, SSH, and Network File System (NFS). FreeNAS can be installed on the hard disk or removable media USB Flash Disk. The FreeNAS server has a promising future. It is an excellent choice for building a simple network storage server
Supported operating systems: Independent of operating system
Link: http://www.freenas.org/
14. Lustre
Lustre is an open source, distributed parallel file system software platform, which has the characteristics of high scalability, high performance, and high availability. The construction goal of Lustre is to provide a globally consistent POSIX-compliant namespace for large-scale computing systems, which include the most powerful high-performance computing systems in the world. It supports hundreds of PB of data storage space, and supports hundreds of GB/s or even several TB/s of concurrent aggregate bandwidth. Some of the first users to adopt it include several major national laboratories in the United States: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Supported operating system: Linux
Link: http://lustre.org/
15. Ceph
Ceph is a distributed file system designed for excellent performance, reliability and scalability. It is the earliest project dedicated to the development of the next generation of high-performance distributed file systems. With the development of cloud computing, Ceph took advantage of the spring breeze of OpenStack, and then became one of the most concerned projects in the open source community.
Supported operating system: Linux
Link: https://ceph.com/
Operating System: CentOS, Ubuntu
16. CentOS
CentOS (Community Enterprise Operating System) is one of the Linux distributions, which is compiled from the source code released by Red Hat Enterprise Linux in accordance with the open source regulations. Since it comes from the same source code, some servers that require high stability use CentOS instead of the commercial version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. The difference between the two is that CentOS is completely open source.
Link: http://www.centos.org/
17. Ubuntu
Ubuntu is also open source and has a huge community power. Users can easily get help from the community and provide a popular Linux distribution. There are multiple versions: desktop version, server version, cloud version, mobile version, tablet version And the Internet of Things version. The claimed users include Amazon, IBM, Wikipedia and Nvidia.
Link: http://www.ubuntu.com/
Database: MySQL, PostgreSQL, MongoDB, Cassandra, CouchDB, Neo4j
18. MySQL
MySQL is a relational database written in C/C++. It claims to be "the most popular open source database in the world". It is favored by many Internet companies. In addition to the free community version, it also has a variety of paid versions. Although it is free and open source, its performance is sufficiently guaranteed. Many domestic IT companies are using MySQL.
Supported operating system: Windows, Linux, Unix and OS X
Link: https://www.mysql.com/
19. PostgreSQL
PostgreSQL is a very powerful client/server relational database management system with open source code. The well-known Huawei Gauss database and Tencent's TBase database are both developed on the basis of this database. All the codes of the best Alibaba OceanBase database in China are independently developed. Although it is not developed on the basis of PostgreSQL, it should also draw on many features and advantages of PostgreSQL.
Supported operating system: Windows, Linux, Unix and OS X
Link: https://www.postgresql.org/
20. MongoDB
MongoDB is a NoSQL database, a database based on distributed file storage. Written by C++ language. Designed to provide scalable high-performance data storage solutions for applications. MongoDB is a product between relational and non-relational databases. Among non-relational databases, MongoDB is the most versatile and most similar to relational databases. Users include Foursquare, Forbes, Pebble, Adobe, LinkedIn, eHarmony and other companies. Provide paid professional version and enterprise version.
Supported operating system: Windows, Linux, OS X and Solaris
Link: https://www.mongodb.org/
21. Cassandra
This NoSQL database was developed by Facebook, and its users include Apple, CERN, Comcast, Electronic Harbor, GitHub, GoDaddy, Hulu, Instagram, Intuit, Netflix, Reddit and other technology companies. It supports extremely large data sets and claims to have very high performance and outstanding durability and flexibility. Support can be obtained through a third party.
Supported operating systems: Independent of operating system
Link: https://cassandra.apache.org/
22. CouchDB
CouchDB is a document-oriented database system developed in Erlang. This NoSQL database stores data in JSON documents. Such documents can be queried through HTTP and processed with JavaScript. CouchDB is now owned by IBM, and it provides a software version supported by professionals. Users include: Samsung, Akamai, Expedia, Microsoft Game Studios and other companies.
Supported operating systems: Windows, Linux, OS X and Android
Link: https://couchdb.apache.org/
23. Neo4j
Neo4J is a high-performance NOSQL graph database that stores structured data on the network instead of in tables. It claims to be "the world's leading graph database" for fraud detection, recommendation engines, social networking sites, master data management, and More areas. Users include eBay, Walmart, Cisco, Hewlett-Packard, Accenture, CrunchBase, eHarmony, Care.com and many other enterprise organizations.
Supported operating system: Windows and Linux
Link: https://neo4j.com/
Developing Tools and Components
24. Bugzilla
Bugzilla is the darling of the open source community, users include Mozilla, Linux Foundation, GNOME, KDE, Apache, LibreOffice, Open Office, Eclipse, Red Hat, Novell and other companies. Important features of this software bugtracker include: advanced search functions, email notifications, scheduled reports, time tracking, excellent security and more features.
Supported operating system: Windows, Linux and OS X
Link: https://www.bugzilla.org/
25. Eclipse
The most well-known of the Eclipse project is that it is a popular integrated development environment (IDE) for Java. It also provides IDEs for C/C++ and PHP, as well as a large number of development tools. The main supporters include Guanqun Technology, Google, IBM, Oracle, Red Hat and SAP.
Supported operating systems: Independent of operating system
Link: https://www.eclipse.org/
26. Ember.js
Ember.js is an open source JavaScript client-side framework for developing Web applications and using the MVC architecture pattern. This framework is used to "build ambitious Web applications" and aims to improve work efficiency for JavaScript developers. The official website shows that users include Yahoo, Square, Livingsocial, Groupon, Twitch, TED, Netflix, Heroku and Microsoft.
Supported operating systems: Independent of operating system
Link: https://emberjs.com/
27. Node.js
Node is a development platform that allows JavaScript to run on the server. It makes JavaScript a scripting language on par with server-side languages such as PHP, Python, Perl, and Ruby. It allows developers to use JavaScript to write server-side applications. The development work was previously controlled by Jwoyent and is now overseen by the Node.js Foundation. Users include IBM, Microsoft, Yahoo, SAP, LinkedIn, PayPal and Netflix.
Supported operating system: Windows, Linux and OS X
Link: https://nodejs.org/
28. React Native
React Native was developed by Facebook. This framework can be used to build native mobile applications using JavaScript and React JavaScript libraries (also developed by Facebook). Other users include: "Discovery" channel and CBS Sports News Network.
Supported operating system: OS X
Link: https://facebook.github.io/react-native/
29. Ruby on Rails
Ruby on Rails is a framework that makes it easy for you to develop, deploy, and maintain web applications. This web development framework is extremely popular among developers, and it claims to be "optimized to ensure programmers' satisfaction and continuous and efficient work." Users include companies such as Basecamp, Twitter, Shopify, and GitHub.
Supported operating system: Windows, Linux and OS X
Link: https://rubyonrails.org/
Middleware
30. JBoss
JBoss is an open source application server based on J2EE. JBoss code follows the LGPL license and can be used for free in any commercial application. JBoss is a container and server that manages EJB. It supports EJB 1.1, EJB 2.0 and EJB3 specifications, but JBoss core services do not include WEB containers that support servlet/JSP, and are generally used in conjunction with Tomcat or Jetty. JBoss middleware includes a variety of lightweight, cloud-friendly tools that combine, integrate, and automate various enterprise applications and systems at the same time. Users include: Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Nissan, Cisco, Crown Group, AMD and other companies.
Supported operating system: Linux
Link: https://www.jboss.org/
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TrueNAS Core will soon replace FreeNAS—and we test the beta

Earlier this week, network-storage vendor iXsystems announced the release of TrueNAS 12.0-BETA1, which will replace FreeNAS later in 2020. The major offering of the new TrueNAS Core—like FreeNAS before it—is a simplified, graphically managed way to expose the features and benefits of the ZFS filesystem to end users. In the most basic environments, this might amount to little more than a Web front-end to ZFS itself, along with the Samba open-source implementation of Microsoft’s SMB network file-sharing protocol.
Although this might be sufficient for the majority of users, it only scratches the surface of what TrueNAS Core is capable of. For instance, more advanced storage users may choose to share files via NFS or iSCSI in addition to or in place of SMB. Additional services can be installed via plug-ins utilizing FreeBSD’s jail (containerization) facility, and the system can even run guest operating systems by way of FreeBSD’s BHyve virtualization system—all managed via Web interface alone.
TrueNAS Core will be what FreeNAS is now—the free, community version of iXsystems’ NAS (Network Attached Storage) distribution. End users—and system administrators who aren’t looking for paid support—can download FreeNAS or TrueNAS Core ISOs directly from iX, burn them to a bootable optical disc or thumbdrive, and install them on generic x86 hardware like any other operating system.
We’ve been kicking the tires on early versions of TrueNAS Core since its announcement in March, and we see no evidence of any FreeNAS functionality slipping away behind “premium only” paywalls. The dividing lines between TrueNAS Core and TrueNAS Enterprise are no different than those between earlier versions of FreeNAS and TrueNAS itself.
Due to the sheer breadth of TrueNAS Core’s offerings, we can’t walk you through everything it’s capable of in a single article. But we will hit the major highlights along the way—we’ll install the distribution and set up a storage pool on eight physical disks, join TrueNAS Core to a Windows Active Directory domain, set up some file shares, and play with ZFS snapshot and replication facilities.
The user interface has come a very long way in the six years since our 2014 review of FreeNAS. The modern TrueNAS interface has been entirely rebuilt from scratch, along much more coherent lines. If you’ve tried and given up on old versions of FreeNAS, it’s worth taking a second look at how far it has come.
Installation
If these options seem overwhelming, installing and managing your own storage distribution may not be for you.
Jim Salter
Once you’ve decided to install, the next question is where you want the root and boot filesystem to go.
Jim Salter
This wasn’t our first TrueNAS Core test run, so we’re given the option to upgrade or install fresh. We chose the fresh install.
Jim Salter
FORMAT! EVERYTHING!
Jim Salter
Last chance to abort! It’s a little odd that we’re not told about the preference for “flash media” until the “oh no” screen, but okay.
Jim Salter
You’ll need to set a root password before rebooting. There is no strength check here; if you want to use “poop” as your password, the installer won’t complain.
Jim Salter
TrueNAS supports either UEFI or BIOS boot. Both modes worked on our Linux KVM virtual machine, and directly on the metal of the Storage Hot Rod.
Jim Salter
That’s the whole install—pop the install medium out of the system and reboot.
Jim Salter
The first-boot phase of a TrueNAS Core installation is the simplest OS installation we’ve ever seen. TrueNAS Core doesn’t ask you to do the complicated stuff during the original installation; all it wants to do is slap the operating system onto a boot disk and have done with it. You pick a disk (or USB thumb drive) to act as the boot-and-root medium, set a password, and pick UEFI- or BIOS-style boot—that’s it.
All of the interesting stuff—like configuring the rest of your disks as actual storage devices or creating and exposing network shares for them—happens later.
First boot
This ASCII splash screen hangs around for five seconds; if it hasn’t received input by then it falls through to a standard boot.
Jim Salter
The only thing most users will need to do at the text console is configure the network interface (which defaults to DHCP).
Jim Salter
You might think you’d WANT to “remove the current settings of this interface”—but if you do, it just returns you to the menu. So, uh, don’t?
Jim Salter
Don’t forget to configure your default route (and DNS) as well as the IP address, if you leave DHCP mode.
Jim Salter
There isn’t much to do on your first reboot after installing TrueNAS Core—little or no configuration is ever done at the physical machine. By default, the system will assign configurations to any live network interfaces by DHCP. If you don’t want to issue a specific DHCP reservation for the TrueNAS system at your router, you’ll need to manually set an IP address in the text-based menu here.
Once you’ve got your TrueNAS Core system living at its “forever IP address,” it’s time to walk away, sit down in front of the computer or mobile device of your choice, and browse to the TrueNAS Web interface to get the real configuration work done.
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Tackle Some Tech While Stuck in the House

As we find ourselves stuck in the house with so much time on our hands I figured we can visit some small tech related projects to pass the time. With stuff you may have laying around the house; you can try to keep you from going insane or watching too much TV.
Digitize old photos: If you still have that old box of photos or the photo album that’s falling apart; now is the time to get those in digital form before they wither away. Most home printers have some form of a scanner and scanning software that will allow you to scan and save to file. Some flatbed scanners even have an option to scan multiple pictures at a time. It can distinguish the photo edges and save each picture to a separate image speeding up the process. After scanning them all you can save the folder of picture in multiple locations for backup.
Build your own NAS: Yes there are consumer NAS systems out there reasonably priced that you can buy; but in reality it’s pretty easy to build your own NAS if you have the hardware laying around. The way to go about this is with a software based NAS. All you need is Desktop PC and some hard drives. What ever physical capacity you have with the machine you can load extra drives into the PC. With that you can simply use the built in Windows storage or you can go with something like FreeNAS. FreeNAS is an open source OS that gives you everything you would see with a consumer NAS you would find on the market. If you can dedicate the machine to your storage then FreeNAS is the better route. Once you have the storage built you can create a file share and share it out to your home network.
Take on a Raspberry Pi Project: Want to get your hands a little dirty and try something a little outside the box; grab a Raspberry Pi and tackle your own DIY tech project. You do anything with this small micro-computer; create some automation, build an old-school gaming system, even the previously mentioned file server. You can get pretty creative with this one and a simple google search of pi projects will have you plenty busy for the foreseeable future.
Repurpose some old tech: Old phone or tablet sitting in the drawer? Give it a second chance as a single-use device or a hand me down for the kids. For example; you can set these up as a display clock, TV remote, or an e-reader. If you want to give the kids something to keep busy them strip the device and restrict it to select apps you are okay with the kids playing with or watching.
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FreeNAS 11.3 lançado com uma série de melhorias
FreeNAS 11.3 lançado com uma série de melhorias
O lançamento do FreeNAS 11.3 acaba de ser feito. Este é um sistema operacional de código aberto e gratuito (licença BSD) baseado no FreeBSD que fornece serviços de armazenamento em rede NAS. Assim, permite que esse sistema converta um computador pessoal em um suporte acessível em rede, por exemplo, para armazenamento em massa de informações, músicas, backups etc. Confira a seguir os detalhes do…
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専用OSで簡単自宅ファイルサーバー構築『0から始める!簡単!FreeNAS構築チュートリアル!』発行 ...
専用OSで簡単自宅ファイルサーバー構築『0から始める!簡単!FreeNAS構築チュートリアル!』発行 技��の泉シリーズ、10月の新刊. 2019年10月15日10 ...
https://ift.tt/32hg1GH
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オープンソースで開発されているFreeBSDベースのファイアフォール「OPNsense 17.7」リリース
from https://mag.osdn.jp/17/08/02/160000 オープンソースのファイアフォールOPNsense開発チームは7月31日、最新版となる「OPNsense 17.7」(開発コード「Free Fox」)を公開した。日本語対応が完成したほか、機能面でも多数の強化が加わっている。
ニュース オープンソース デベロッパー 末岡洋子
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