I like having network-based storage, so I can have a place to store backups,
large files that I’m not using, copies of media that I’ve purchased,
audiobooks, etc.
For the last 10 years, I’ve accomplished this with a four-bay Synology, which I
eventually replaced with a second four-bay Synology, keeping the old one as a
backup.
You can run various programs on the Synology because it is basically a
low-powered server. The UI was helpful for me as a beginner.
In the long run, however, I wanted more customization than I could get from
Synology, which eventually led me to buy a mini
PC to run everything except the
basic file server and backup functions.
Finally, I decided that I wanted even more customizability, I wanted a way to
put all of my drives in one machine, and I was itching for a fun side project. I
briefly looked into other network storage options and decided that, since I had
never built a computer from scratch before, it would be fun to try a custom
build.
Parts
I don’t remember exactly how it all came together. There are a lot of options,
a lot of decision to be made, and I didn’t really know what I was doing.
I wanted room for a lot of disks and the ability to hot-swap, which led me
to the Jonsbo N5 case,
which holds 12 disks. It was great for a first build because it is quite
spacious.
I wanted a way to access it without a keyboard or monitor, so my main
requirement for the motherboard was something server-grade with
IPMI.
The motherboard I bought has a separate ethernet port that presents a web
interface to configure the firmware settings as well as to connect remotely to
a virtual monitor.
I wanted a CPU with integrated graphics, and I went with a mid-line Intel chip
(“Core Ultra 5”).
I also needed a host bus adapter
to be able to connect so many hard drives to the motherboard. This goes in a
PCIe slot.
Finally, I wanted ECC RAM (very expensive thanks to AI), and some SSDs to run
the operating system. Plus a power supply, a bunch of cables, and some fans.
Build
The build was like an expensive Lego project except I might have bought the
wrong pieces. It really was fun to see all of the different pieces come
together.
I had a hard time getting the CPU cooler attached and I was worried I had done
it wrong.
I had some annoying fan issues because I had some giant 14-inch fans for the
front of the case that max out at 800 RPM. If they went below 300 RPM, the
motherboard would think they had failed and start pulsing all of the fans, or
else blowing them all full blast. I eventually solved this by connecting them
to a fan hub so that the motherboard wouldn’t know how fast they were going.
I’m sure there are better ways.
Those issues notwithstanding, I did manage to boot it up on the first try.
Unfortunately, I had a couple of suspicious crashes in the first few days,
mostly when I was transferring large files to the new computer. I realized that
before I started trying to install anything, I should have done some diagnostic
checks.
When I ran MemTest86 to check whether there were
RAM issues, it froze four seconds into the first test. It failed so hard that I
figured I must have done something wrong with seating the CPU, or that the
motherboard was faulty.
I tried reseating the CPU to see if I’d screwed it up, but eventually resigned
myself to buying more RAM. This was a painful choice because RAM was 1/3 the
cost of the full build. But it was the right choice; the new RAM passed
MemTest86, and I got a refund for the first batch of RAM.
So with that, I had a working computer. It was a really fun way to spend some
of my free time. I wouldn’t say it was easy or frustration-free, but I learned
a lot. It was also a good complement to my day job, where I wrangle computers
like they’re herds of cattle without ever seeing or touching a single one.
The computer sits on a shelf in the garage, with a cable around it for earthquake safety.
Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park, Big Sur, California
Limekiln State Park redwoods
Limekiln State Park near Big Sur, California.
Writing go code is a thousand paper cuts but then you get that nice beautiful binary and you put it wherever you want and I’m still not sure it’s worth it.
Well done Bruce Springsteen. I’m touched by the designation “Winter of ‘26.” Some events are too momentous for a descriptive label. Here’s hoping we remember it as a turning point, a wake-up call to the complacent.
US politics are more about identity and power than principles, even though we
like to pretend otherwise. In my high school in conservative, rural Idaho, we
would debate the virtues of small, limited government, second amendment
freedoms, family values candidates, and I was duped into thinking the choice
was between Platform A or Platform B, when it was really a choice between
giving power to a “friend” or an “enemy.”
It took me an embarrassingly long time to realize that my principles were more
aligned with the Democrats, even though I felt “more at home” among the
Republicans. But I have also changed, trading Idaho for Seattle, then Los
Angeles, to the point where today I feel more at home in a city coffee shop
than a county fair or a church service.
While I have always voted against Trump, I have supported some candiates that I
now strongly regret. And I try my best to see the humanity in those who did
vote for him, because everyone has their own journey.
But today, everyone must oppose the Trump administration, with its calculated,
provocative, performative violence, including but not limited to the killing of
Renee Good and Alex Pretti. We cannot accept the lies, obstruction, and
cover-ups that have followed. Anybody involved in or responsible for these
violent acts or their cover-ups should be impeached, removed from office,
and/or put in jail for their crimes. Every person in power who refuses to hold
these offenders to account should be voted out of office and remembered as the
cowards that they are.
We cannot wait until the next election to take power away from these monsters.
Speak up today, set the record straight if you’ve had a change of heart. Call
your representatives and tell them to defend us and enforce our laws.
ICE is not our friend; Trump and his enablers are our enemy.
I’ve almost exclusively worn an Apple Watch for the past several years. I still
wear one when exercising and sleeping, and I plan to still wear it on some
other occasions, but I wanted to see what it was like to go back, shall we say,
to a simpler time.
My initial feelings are a happy dose of nostalgia. Back before all of our
phones and watches and cars were synchronized to NIST time, I would carefully
synchronize my Timex digital watch to the school bell time. It was satisfying
to know exactly how much time was left in class (or passing period) while most
of my classmates just had to wait and wonder when freedom would come (or end).
With a “dumb” watch, there is this same sense of satisfaction, that I know the
precise time not through the wonders of the internet, but because I made the
effort to accurately set my watch.
A GMT Complication
My new watch is a GMT watch, which is a popular watch style over the last
century or so, because it makes it easy to know the time in a second or even
third location, and can make it easier to change the time as well.
There are many different styles of GMT watch, but they are usually
distinguished by a separate “GMT hand” that makes one revolution per 24 hours,
compared to a traditional hour hand that revolves once per 12 hours. A GMT
watch typically has the traditional hour hand as well, which most people call
the “local hour hand,” because it tracks the time of your current location.
Both of these hands are typically aligned to the same minute hand.
Being non-smart watches, they are relatively simple to configure. A true GMT
or flyer GMT lets you adjust the time (minutes and hours) on all three
hands simultaneously, and then jump the local hour hand forward or backwards an
hour at a time. On a caller GMT or office GMT, the jump function moves the
GMT hand forward or backwards an hour at a time. Either way, you can track both
the local time and a separate reference time, but the caller GMT is more
cumbersome to travel with, because if you change time zones, you have to reset
the watch the same way you would any watch, and then also fix the GMT hand to
point back to whatever reference time you want to track. A flyer GMT lets
you quickly adjust the local time without messing up the GMT hand at all.
Many GMT watches also feature a rotating bezel labeled on a 24-hour scale. This
gives you a way to quickly change the meaning of the GMT hand by shifting the
labels instead of the hand. Hence you have the ability to track a potentially
third time zone. I say potentially because on most GMT watches with a bezel,
the bezel is the only set of 24-hour labels, so if you rotate it, you might not
know exactly where the GMT hand is pointing on the “natural” set of labels.
Here are some examples of tracking two or three time zones on a GMT watch:
It is 10:11 a.m. in Central European Summer Time, and the GMT hand is showing 08:11 UTC.
By rotating the dial four 15-degree clicks, we can read the New York Daylight Saving Time (UTC−4) as 04:11.
In these examples, note that the twelve o’clock position represents midnight
UTC, and in the second example, the 20 (which is −4 modulo 24) lines up with
this slot so that we can read UTC−4. And even with the bezel rotated, you get
a sense of the UTC time because you will at least remember where 0, 6, 12, and
18 would be on the unrotated bezel.
Open to interpretation
Although a GMT watch only has a few configurable parts (minutes, local hour,
GMT hour, and bezel rotation), you get to choose what the configuration should
be. If you really wanted to, you could have the “local time” always be your
home time and the “GMT hand” be your current local time.
I knew I wanted to use the local hour hand the normal way, with the local time
of wherever I happen to be (usually in Los Angeles). At first, I thought that I
would use the GMT hand for UTC, and then rotate the bezel to whatever second
time zone I was actually interested in. But I was quickly annoyed that the
direction of the GMT hand didn’t really have any meaning to me.
At 9:29 p.m. Los Angeles winter time, it is 05:29 UTC
Next, I decided to use my home time (or at least UTC−8, more on that in a bit)
for the GMT hand. This way, no matter where I am in the world, the GMT hand in
the upper half means it is night in Los Angeles, and in the lower half means it
is daytime.
Still 9:29 p.m. in Los Angeles, with the local 24-hour time of 21:29 shown on the GMT hand
Then I realized that, because my watch doesn’t have a fixed set of labels, I
could orient the “natural” 24-hour scale with midnight at the bottom and noon
at the top, imitating the path of the sun. I decided to keep the bezel oriented
with the zero marker at 6:00, so that I can read the Los Angeles 24-hour time
off the bezel, if I want.
Again 9:29 p.m. in Los Angeles, with the local 24-hour time of 21:29 shown and the bezel rotated so that noon is at the top and midnight at the bottom.
Then when traveling, I can intuitively read my home time off the GMT hand.
Jumping the local time to 2:29 p.m. (Tokyo time), the GMT hand and bezel still pointing to Los Angeles time of 21:29.
And in this configuration, midnight UTC happens when the GMT is at the two
o’clock position, which means I can easily spin the bezel to read a third time
zone, for example, putting the 1 at two o’clock to read UTC+1.
Still 2:29 p.m. in Tokyo, and 06:29 in UTC+1. Evening in Los Angeles.
Los Angeles time zone vs UTC−8
Here is where things get a little speculative because I’ve only had the watch
for a month, and haven’t had to transition to summer time. So I have plans but
maybe I will change my mind after some experience.
The Los Angeles time zone is only UTC−8 on winter time. For the rest of the
year, we observe Daylight Saving Time, which puts us at UTC−7.
There are a lot of reasons to leave the GMT hand at (noon-on-top) UTC−8. First
of all, it makes adjusting for Daylight Saving Time a simple jump of the local
hour hand. It also preserves the two o’clock UTC reference point year round,
making a third time zone a bit easier. It is also somewhat convenient because I
can still track (approximate) astronomical noon and midnight.
But it also means that during the summer, if I want the 24-hour bezel to track
Los Angeles 24-hour time by default, then it has to be one 15-degree rotation
askew.
Local Los Angeles summer time of 6:48 p.m., the bezel rotated to show UTC−7 time of almost 19:00, but the GMT hand also shows the natural solar time of almost 18:00.
Quick spin of the bezel, aligning the 9 with the two o’clock marker, to check UTC+9 Tokyo time, where it is nearly 11 a.m.
The Apple Watch GMT Face
Many years ago, I tried to use the Apple Watch GMT Face and didn’t last long. I
looked at it again to remind myself why I don’t like it.
First of all, you have no choice about any orientations. The local hand has to
match your local time (but at least it automatically adjusts when you travel).
And of course, up has to be midnight because the programmers might die if they
had to add that level of complexity.
The GMT hand also has to match your local time as well. As I mentioned, I don’t
like how this messes with my intuition in the admittedly rare case when I’m
in a different time zone.
You track a second time zone with a software spin of the bezel. Making use of
the flexibility of a digital screen, the bezel is two-toned with the colors
representing night and day, based on the current sunrise and sunset in the
second time zone. Analog GMT watches often have two-toned bezels, with
transitions fixed at 6 and 18. (You could argue that 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. are more
useful markers than sunrise and sunset in a time zone where you aren’t
currently located.)
Unfortunately, the Apple Watch bezel isn’t actually labeled
except for the index closest to the hand, because otherwise the digital face
gets too cluttered. Even worse, if you have your watch set to show 12-hour
time, the index gets labeled with the 12-hour time, with no indication of a.m.
vs p.m. except for the color of the bezel.
Apple Watch showing 2:44 p.m. in Los Angeles, 10:44 p.m. in London. You infer that pink is night because it is so long, or from the triangle that still marks midnight. Note that the GMT hand tracks Los Angeles time (currently UTC−8), but with midnight on top, so UTC midnight is at the eight o’clock marker.
Finally, and this is an ongoing gripe I have against Apple, by default the time
zone label in the middle of the face says CUP for Cupertino (just like in
iPhone Settings). If that annoys you, you can change it to SF for San
Francisco. Neither of those is the correct name of the time zone. Twenty years
ago it was cute to label the Pacific time zone as Cupertino in honor of your
headquarters. It’s not cute anymore.
Many years after starting The Wheel of Time series (I took a few years’ hiatus between the first 7 and final 7 books), I finished it. Great world, great characters, overall lots of fun.
Hard to do the series justice, but I guess I would say the first few books are the most exciting, the middle books make for some interesting world building, and Robert Jordan started to pick up steam again before his life was cut short. I don’t believe he ever would have ended the series, too many ideas and too many stories.
On a single ten-minute ride from the bus stop to my house, two middle-school-aged kids and one preschooler complimented my bike.
The backyard of my childhood home, Pocatello, Idaho. When I was a kid it was potatoes on the other side of the fence.
Proud of my kiddo who raised $200 for the Trevor Project by selling crocheted frogs at a “marketplace” event put on by the high school.
Many years after starting, I finally finished Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time series. I think I did the whole thing by audiobook, which by my calculations (assuming my typical 1.4x speed) is 321 hours of audio. Great series!
I’m slowly moving to Jujutsu for my version control needs. For years, I’ve been using Mercurial-based interface to Piper at work and Git at home, and switching challenges my muscle memory. Jujutsu provides a common interface that can handle a central repo in either format. I find it easier to work with than Git or Mercurial, but there is a learning curve.