Uh yeah, GLaDOS voice! I'll try SherpaTTS tomorrow.
I'll report back tomorrow, thank you very much!
Uh yeah, GLaDOS voice! I'll try SherpaTTS tomorrow.
I'll report back tomorrow, thank you very much!
Sadly, I'm back to square one now.
I am able to hear he first sentence and that's it :(
Proxmox Virtual Environment (PVE, Hypervisor), my beloved. Especially in combination with Proxmox Backup Server (PBS).
My homelab would not exist without Proxmox VE, as I'm definitely not going to use Nutanix or VMWare. I love working with linux and Proxmox VE is literally debian with a modified kernel and a Management Webinterface on top.
I first learned about Proxmox VE in my company, while we still had VMWare for us and all of our customers. We gradually switched everyone over to Proxmox VE and now I'm using it at home too. Proxmox is an Austrian (my country) company, so I was double hyped about this software.
A few things I like most about Proxmox VE
(*) What I mean by ease of access to the correct part of the documentation is: Whenever you're in the WebUI and need to decide on some settings, there's a button somewhere on the same page which is going to lead you directly to the portion of the documentation you need right now. I don't know why this seems like such a great luxury, every software should have something like this.
Next steps
My "server" (some mini PC with spare parts I already had) is getting too weak for the workload I put it through, so I'm going to migrate to a better "server". I already have a PC and most of the necessary parts, I just need some SSDs and an AMD CPU.
Even migrating from PVE (old) -> PVE (new) couldn't be easier:
I think it's great to have a series posting about personal achievements and troubles with selfhosting. There's so much software out there, you always get to see someone doing something you didn't even know could be done or using a software you didn't realize even existed. Sharing is caring.
My only thought is maybe your tts software?
Thank you for your input! I, too, suspect the culprit being RHVoice. I have no proof, though. Yet.
While digging through GrapheneOS's system settings, I found something which may be of interest. Text-to-speech settings were set to use RHVoice and use system settings for the language. There are 2 sliders to alter speech speed and pitch and there's a button to test the new settings. Neither could I use the sliders, nor the button, all of them were greyed out.
After setting the spoken language to english (united states), the sliders and button became usable. I did start a test-navigation with Osmand and it now also tells me the first thing I need to do on my drive (turn left in 400m), which it didn't do before.
Not sure how that setting changes anything of relevance though. RHVoice has no german voice (my system language), but all the navigation apps mentioned above come with their own voices. I'll test this out tomorrow on my way to work.
Will report back. Thanks again!
Of course you can always build a good PC or server.
I could have done that too, but I wanted my first real homelab-do-it-all-yourself setup to be a little more on the cautiously small side. I didn't want to have too much noise in my apartment and also didn't want to stress my electricity-bill and wallet too much, so I opted to build small and reuse what I had lying around.
I already had 2 Mini-PCs and a raspberry pi from earlier experiments with selfhosting. I just bought some disks and RAM. If you don't have any mini-PCs, they're relatively cheap in comparison with full PCs. Or you could use some older PC you still have but do not use.
My motto more or less was you can always spend more money and build bigger later
The final Hardware
What I host on my Proxmox VE
The 2nd Mini PC (some old intel NUC with 4 cores and 16 GB RAM) + a USB HDD is my Proxmox Backup Server for all this. And what's really important (my data from nextcloud + some configs) gets backed up to my Hetzner Storage Box with restic.
The raspberry pi is now my WiFi Access Point :)
Conclusion
Homelab doesn't need to be big or small, it can be whatever you want it to be or whatever you can afford or are willing to have and maintain. From my experience, if you're not hosting anything CPU-intensive, older or smaller machines will do just fine.
For example, my nextcloud could easily use more resources than the whole Zotac ZBox could house, if there were more users. But as my services are only used by me, most of them are idle most of the time.
Tip at the end about your opsense-VM on Proxmox
I tried letting Proxmox host my pfSense too, but that got old pretty fast. Whenever Proxmox needed a Reboot, my internet was gone too for that time, as the pfSense VM on Proxmox was the gateway to my ISP-modem. In the end, I just bought a real Netgate pfSense appliance.
I'm currently in the process of de-googling and generally removing my reliance on company-services for my digital stuff.
Currently using nextcloud for contacts, calendar, files and photos (via nextcloud memories). It's not super fancy, but it's easy to use, understand, setup and it doesn't require all too much out of your system, etc. My self-hosted nextcloud stuff (+ a few other VMs) all run on the same mini-PC in my living room.
Regarding the coming netxcloud memories app: I just sync the photos to my desktop and laptop via nextcloud desktop app. This is probably only possible because I do not own terabytes of pictures though. If you have a lot of photos and videos, I can understand how syncing would be a bad idea.
I didn't know photoprism, I'm going to take a look at that for the "curated albums" feature, thanks!
Sadly, that did not solve my problems either.
There's still no voice output except for the first sentence of all of the navigation apps and when I test the voice navigation with osmand development plugin.
GLaDOS voice is working though, just not when navigating. So, when you actually need it.