• 1 Post
  • 31 Comments
Joined 1 month ago
cake
Cake day: April 12th, 2026

help-circle





    1. Yes and it all does not matter in the slightest for discussing if a language is a right choice for something like Piefed. Not that there’s much to engage with in the original post - I almost regret leaving a comment on a post like this, but I feel this may be a learning for some.
    2. There is zero significance in it being supported in “that” way. There used to be a Go-specific runtime (before there were OS runtimes), but they have dropped it because it made no sense once OS runtimes appeared. If you use TS you likely already have a build step somewhere before deployment unless your function is dead simple (which admittedly it should be, but rarely is). Might as well compile a binary, it’s not that complicated. And yes, using a compiled language like go (or C, yes) may absolutely be the correct choice depending on what you need - if it’s in a hot path which serves a lot of traffic then it may lead to much better warm up times and better throughput, as there isn’t a whole runtime to boot and script to interpret like there would be with Node and/or Python (let’s not talk about Java). I’m simplifying a bit, but hope that helps.

    I’m just making a case of how not obsolete python is.

    There’s no need to do that, it’s self-evident and the original post does not deserve a second of anyone’s time.















  • I just realized this almost reads like a Terramaster ad, that’s not my goal; you can search for similar options from other fabricants.

    I don’t mind that, I’m actively looking for recommendations. I also got pointed to https://www.minisforum.com/products/n5-air, but that one is 500 with no RAM at all, which is quite hefty.

    So far I’m leaning towards trying to assemble something generic from used components, though I’m not quite sure what to pick best, motherboard being the hardest one.

    As for TrueNAS - I might check it out if I do get off the shelf NAS, but I don’t imagine I’ll be using the Web UI much, to be honest. And I know about Jellyfin, I’m sticking to Plex just because I already have a lifetime Plex Pass and I like the app on my TV. If they keep shoving “community” features down my throat though - I’ll do the switch.