Its acquirer (Bending Spoons) has taken over operations. They’ve also hiked subscriptions prices and told customers they intend to use new revenues to pay for new features. How they intend to do that without any staff is something I would like to know about.

If you’re still using Evernote, probably a good time to stop.

  • stackPeek@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    1 year ago

    If it’s the sort of thing that conceptually can be run on a raspberry pi and use less than 1% of that little CPU, it’s not something I want to pay every month for.

    OOT, is Raspi really capable of self-hosting, and is running things like this really that lightweight?

    • vaguerant@kbin.social
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      5
      ·
      1 year ago

      People self-host all kinds of things on Raspberry Pis, from web and other servers to home automation hubs. Web serving is extremely cheap in terms of CPU time, even moreso when you’re only hosting for yourself and perhaps family/friends. I wouldn’t recommend running an open web service like a Lemmy instance on a Raspberry Pi, but hosting something like this would have a minimal impact on a Pi. I have a multiple-generations-old Pi 3 which hosts an IRC bouncer, DNS-level ad blocker, Matrix chat bridge, web server and probably more stuff I’ve already forgotten and I can still use it for media playback or retro emulation concurrent to the rest, if the mood strikes.

      • wolfshadowheart@kbin.social
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        3
        ·
        1 year ago

        Nice, thank you for reminding me of a few uses to put my Pi’s to. I had it set up as a Plex server for a long time but it just wasn’t strong enough (rather, too much transcoding even for files that should have direct played). Then between the Steam Deck taking over emulation and my MagicMirror being more visual than informational the Pi’s slowly faded from use.

        Now I’ve been wondering how I’m going to self host all these services when my two PC’s already have pretty dedicated uses I don’t want to bog them down with, or force them to be on all the time. And here we are, Pi’s coming back into play!