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Jeff's Gluon Laboratory
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 14 ก.ย. 2012
A place where the Jeff's of the world make stuff, break stuff, and shake stuff.
Network Wiring in the Homelab
A consideration of a few different ways to layout the network gear and the network wiring in your homelab.
มุมมอง: 4 731
วีดีโอ
An introduction to Astrophotography
มุมมอง 1K21 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
A short introduction to astrophotography along with a bit of history.
SHORT: My other 02 WRX. in vintage 2005 mod form!
มุมมอง 749วันที่ผ่านมา
A quick look at my low milage 2002 WRX with those tasty mods circa 2005!
Fiber optics in home low voltage wiring: How and what I did.
มุมมอง 3.3Kวันที่ผ่านมา
A look at the what and where of running fiber optic during my home construction.
Fiber in the homelab: An introduction to fiber
มุมมอง 5K14 วันที่ผ่านมา
An introduction to the world of fiber for the home and homelab. We will explore the different types of fiber and fiber optics including SFP, SFP , QSFP , QSFP28, and more.
SHORT: Building an Integra GSR
มุมมอง 91514 วันที่ผ่านมา
My first car after college was a new 1996 Integra GSR, and I am going to take this 1995 GSR and bring it back to it's original glory!
Project Roscoe Ep 4: Designing and Building a 68030 Computer
มุมมอง 43614 วันที่ผ่านมา
In this episode we will delve into the way we are going to build logic on our motherboard. FPGA, CPLDs, and more!
SHORT: The old Subaru WRX H6
มุมมอง 67714 วันที่ผ่านมา
Yes, I still have the Turbo H6 WRX! Let's take a quick look.
Project Roscoe Ep 3: Designing and Building a 68030 Computer
มุมมอง 34714 วันที่ผ่านมา
In this episode we will focus on the cache built into the 68030 and how it effects the system design.
SHORT: A few car projects I'm working on...
มุมมอง 1.7K21 วันที่ผ่านมา
It's not all homelabs and old processors here. I have a bunch of different car projects inflight, and here is a quick look at two of them. I'll talk about the R32 GTR in a later video.
Project Roscoe Ep 2: Designing and Building a 68030 Computer
มุมมอง 48921 วันที่ผ่านมา
In this episode we take a deep dive into the signals coming out of the 68030 as well as the bus cycles that we are going to use to talk to devices and memory.
Project Roscoe Ep 1: Designing and Building a 68030 Computer
มุมมอง 1K21 วันที่ผ่านมา
This is the first episode in a series about designing and building a 68030 based computer. This series will be a complete dive down into the how and why, part selection, construction, testing, and all the steps in between.
How to build a Raspberry PI Kiosk for your home/homelab
มุมมอง 6K21 วันที่ผ่านมา
A short walkthrough of how to make a Kiosk using a Raspberry PI. This technique is documented by the fine folks at Raspberry PI at www.raspberrypi.com/tutorials/how-to-use-a-raspberry-pi-in-kiosk-mode/ Minor adaption here since a few things have changed in the latest 64bit release.
My Solar and Battery house power system
มุมมอง 3.8K21 วันที่ผ่านมา
A Quick Look at the Enphase Solar and Battery system installed in my house.
Monitoring Power in your home or homelab.
มุมมอง 5K21 วันที่ผ่านมา
A short look at the devices I used for power monitoring in my home including the integration into InfluxDB and home automation.
NTSC Composite Output Generation - CPLD
มุมมอง 2829 หลายเดือนก่อน
NTSC Composite Output Generation - CPLD
SAMD based Multiprocessor Arduino Board
มุมมอง 8143 ปีที่แล้ว
SAMD based Multiprocessor Arduino Board
"homelab"
I love to see that setup however I will be living with the anxiety that something might break. My one question is what is he trying to solve? can that be done with AWS ? if not , why not?
Homelab? LOL!!!
Hello from Tokyo and love the content!
see, nothing much have changed, if you want computer at home, it will take up whole room.
dude wtf
Dude spends $1000/month just on electricity for the "homelab". 😮
I am going to be making a NAS of some sort in the near future, this video will be really useful for me. Thanks in advance Jeff!! I'll be back 😁
Fantastic stuff! Love that you’ve decided to share your knowledge and love your passion for this stuff! 💪🙏
Finally, a tech guy that does TH-cam instead of a TH-camr that does tech stuff.
Seeing you run Proxmox in your impressive home lab, which is essentially a home data center, made me realize it was time for a change, saying goodbye to VMware ESXi for good.
What software is being used on your kiosk?
Kept it very clean and simple, nicely done! /s
Having worked in a few DC’s along the way and got a taste for infrastructure so my home lab is pretty over the top, but I’ve not got a patch on this lad. Most people don’t ever go down the rabbit hole of terminating their own fibre.
What model is that first switch? Does it have 48x 10GBASE-T ports? I'm looking for a switch that can do at least 2.5GBASE-T with a decent CLI.
Its worst, since i work in those jobs, this is NO HOMELAB! No one has so muche HDDs and Server at Home! But why every Videomaker write Text like this with words Homeabe? U know whats a reall homelab? I've one, small tower midi with small board and power to run esxi with 4 machines at maximum with ssd 2*500GB. Those things are Homelab!
Do it! Put that sleeved short block in there.
Really enjoying your videos. I've been doing IT for decades and I appreciate your level of explanation that allows both novices and experts to follow along and stay engaged.
You win 🏆 🥇 *The Homelab Godfather* 🥇
i'll find better paying job so i can build this, and only run it for word count map reduce
how did you afford all these computers
IMO the keystones are so much more reliable. A shorted patch panel is a pain to troubleshoot.
12:45
I would hate to see your energy bill lol... but nice setup good sir!
I like the evo better
If a man has a weapon named after him, you know that he is veritable.
14:37 It would be nice to add a horizontal organizer for optical patch cords.
Yea, it would be good to have an organizer for those. I think I have an extra optical tray down below that I could use to clean that up!
Why would you need so many servers running in a homelab?
Homelabs but datacenter
His power bill 💸💸💸
Amazing content, thank you Jeff.
Good video but please give us a timelaps🙏🏻
I love how casually there is an r32 in the background
yeah as techie this how I would build my house very cool
Try avoid using cable ties and rather use Velcro straps where possible
can you point to where you see a cable tie? all i see is velcro straps. @shabZA Did you even watch the video?
I am using Velco everywhere, but in the video I did mention cable ties when I meant to say Velcro. Cable ties are generally not recommended because it is easy to over tighten can compress the cables which distorts the geometry a little bit.
@@tylerljohnson it was mentioned in the video cable ties, and yes I did watch the video and did see velcro. Specifically made the comment not to use cable ties based on the mention and my experience. Chill
Ah good idea thanks
absolutely amazing, all of my home network fantasies
I have a suggestion for future videos, the RODE GO microphones are known to be really peaky out of the box, I'd recommend reducing the gain on them so the audio doesn't do that unpleasant clipping. I'd also recommend normalizing/compressing your audio before uploading to TH-cam in your editing software, TH-cam expects audio normalized to -14 LUFS. If you right click on the player and click stats for nerds the content loudness should be about -10 dB for most videos. Very neat wiring, certainly some good tips there! And only just noticed now you've got some LTO stuff on top of the rack!
Excellent recommendation! I’ll try both of those!
@@jeffsponaugle6339try a recorder that can do 32-bit. Then you don’t have to touch gain until post.
ik he got good wifi
doubt he uses wifi
Hey! Keep making the amazing content. It is truly amazing and so informative. Could you please make a patron or just have a channel join button, I would love to help support the great content.
If "work" was a person.
What are your thoughts on using POE for low power devices in a home? You can get LV power and control in a single cable. Most households devices ultimately convert AC down to some flavor of 3.3V or 5V. Are there large efficiency gains to be made from keeping it all DC from the solar panel to the device? I never ran the numbers, but I'm wondering if you did. Similar in philosophy to Facebook data centers piping 480V straight to bare metal and doing a single conversion down.
Needs NTP server and rubidium clock and some rack mount PBX hardware.
Any advice for software engineers to make it big like you did?
Amazing video but you saying “some pretty simple stuff here” is wild 😂
Your video quality keeps getting better.. it's like watching Dave's Garage and the way he grew his channel in a really short time
That is a very kind comment, especially since this video was entirely off the cuff without any real planning. Next up is some actual network configuration deep dives, and for those I'll try to do some actual editing and some graphic overlays. It is fun to think of ideas for videos, and many times the best source is the comments and questions people post.
Please make a video about your IT career choices since you started, maybe with some anecdotes along the way. That would be fun! @@jeffsponaugle6339
@@jeffsponaugle6339awesome! Especially interested in your redundant router setup. I assume the Unifi dream machine in your network rack is only for hosting unify protect and the Unifi controller?
I would recommend reading Dave's Wikipedia article, especially the part about running scams. Doesn't mean that all of his advice / knowledge is useless, but it gives me a bad taste everytime I stumble over one of his videos
First
this is unironically my dream
Where do I have to go to learn how to set something like this up?
I guess no resource spared…
The 'gluon' lab, sounds like they do some pretty nuclear stuff! On a serious note; this must've taken a countless amount of time to construct in designing, planning, testing, and executing a set up where you can a huge array of investigations from mathematical/computational projects to AI stuff. Super interesting and inspiring, I aim to have a laboratory like this in my future