I was curious to see what people’s set ups were with it but couldn’t find much outside of their microphone choices.
I wanted to see how people are mounting them and powering them outside.
I spent most of my work day yesterday reading up on it. I’ve got a couple of Pi’s laying around that I could use.
nostr:npub1zcljlywsdfrt289nff6gze7cy7cz0kfp2g36h090d86ecmxlczyqjk0c2l you are also welcome to join the gang, I didn't @ you originally as you're already sorted but let me know if you want gray@ok0.org (or something else?)
I’m down for that. Thank you!
This looks like a pretty neat project to repurpose a Raspberry Pi.
Got my headphones on listening to this. Love the sound from my Grados.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Zb5NtJDnGY&pp=ygUZbXkgdGVycmlibGUgZnJpZW5kIHN3aXRjaA%3D%3D
If I had the money and the room I’d like to have a rack of gear.
All I’ve got is a miniPC with opnsense and a Synology NAS.
His style is much different from most other war historians I’ve read. He doesn’t focus on the battles so much as the motivations and the people. He also doesn’t really pull punches when talking about the people.
I think she’s sending them all to Chris Christie.
Alice is collecting people’s selfies for nefarious purposes.
Made it through without killing anyone or myself so I’d call it a good day.
Yeah that’s how his Vietnam book was too. You get a lot of the decision making and the background on the war rather than just the battles and fights.
Are you a fan of Max Hastings too? I finished up his book in Vietnam a couple of weeks ago and have read some of his other books as well and I think he’s an excellent historian.
Seems to me that homelab and network gear is one of the few interests where there are still good forums for it.





