That is just the gateway drug to bootstrapping.
Check out https://github.com/fosslinux/live-bootstrap
if you want the real hard stuff.
They already did: https://www.commanderx16.com/
you just probably want something better.
and that is the problem building higher performance requires more advanced lithography and that is expensive and until recently was not even an option for a hobbyist (without taking a mortgage on their house).
Given current stagnation, you need only wait about 10 years for that viable option.
rxvt-unicode with tabbedex.
I refuse to use a terminal emulator that needs more than 100MB of RAM to display 80x24 green text on a black display
checksums at the filesystem level does nothing to protect against memory corruption which can overwrite everything on your disk with null values and a matching checksum; fail to write anything to disk and/or do nothing.
But that is the gamble you take every day with every GB of RAM you have.
the correct answer is Gemini or gopher.
No ECC, absolutely worthless for a NAS if you care about your data.
Raid stopped being optimal now that btrfs and ZFS exist.
If you plan on doing matching drives ZFS is recommended
If you expect mismatched disks, btrfs will work.
If you are most worried about stability get a computer with ECC memory.
If you are most worried about performance, use SSD drives.
If you want a bunch of storage for cheap, use spinning disks (unless you exceed the 100TB capacity range)
Your ZFS backup strategy should be to follow one of the following rulesets:
3-2-1 [3 copies of the data at 2 different locations for the 1 purpose of preserving the data]
4-3-2-1 [4 copies of the data at 3 different locations in 2 different types of media for the 1 purpose of preserving the data]
5-4-3-2-1 [5 copies of the data at 4 different locations across 3 different continents in 2 different types of media for the 1 purpose of preserving the data]
The details of the backup is more if you have a second system to enable ZFS send/receive or if you have to transport deltas from ZFS send
Efficient is sexy
in software these days it is: good, cheap or fast; pick one (if you are lucky [usually things are just bad, expensive and slow as f&*k])
Well the minimal bars for electronics is:
0 - The repair manual exists and is readily available with full schematics of the item in question.
1 - Replacement parts are available for purchase.
2 - Compatible replacement parts are made by 2 or more 3rd party companies
3 - Designs for replacement parts are available
4 - Local maker space is able to make the needed replacement parts.
If you can’t get level 0, you probably shouldn’t buy it if you expect to keep it working for life.
Warzone 2100 (you can download for free as it is an old PC game that went GPL)
gets more on the nose by the day