This is lowkey one of the most interesting videos they have done on this channel in a long time, in terms of tangible, world-changing technology. The utility of that AI search tool is so unfathomably insane
@andrewanderson67358 ай бұрын
yah
@MaxMacZone8 ай бұрын
Seriously this is the stuff I saty on the channel for
@cconnors8 ай бұрын
Google's Gemini let's you search through all of youtube. You can just ask it for random things and it will find youtube clips of it. Truly a game changer.
@lainamitclaire8 ай бұрын
@@0Blueaurano thank you please
@Nitidus8 ай бұрын
@@0BlueauraOh yeah because that's not problematic at all, the AI definitely only "catches criminals" and doesn't harvest your entire life's data, it's definitely not going to create profiles of completely innocent people that could be abused in the blink of an eye. No way there could be severe infringement of privacy rights while the presumption of innocence that prevents this is completely being undermined. Surely we wouldn't get false positives all day long because the data the AI is trained with is full of human bias, most prevalent: racism. There's zero chance that such technology would create a system of total control that could be abused to erect an authoritarian regime in an instant. All of the above definitely wouldn't happen and it's not like have ample precedence from all around the world where those fears already became true. You literally prepare society to be easily taken over by a fascist dictator with this. You make sure that people are completely defenseless.
@09Creeperboy8 ай бұрын
“How’s the edit going? I’m holding your file server” was the best line 😂. And then when Jake walked over with a second node….*chefs kiss*
@39zack8 ай бұрын
the answer was better "is it on wifi?" XD
@zuldero8 ай бұрын
it is still warm
@09Creeperboy8 ай бұрын
@@39zack yeah, they'd be close😂
@nickgwinner31368 ай бұрын
Gives the feeling of "hey, how's your blood doing? I'm holding your heart right here"
@koijoijoe8 ай бұрын
@@39zack is it on wifi is so freaking funny to come up with for how fast linus just ambushed him on camera lol
@Gilanas8 ай бұрын
Next video: "we lost all our data"
@CraftBlack8 ай бұрын
😂☠️
@NicholasHoffmann18 ай бұрын
Server dies, new server installed. All other servers replicate from the new one instead of the other way round. Poof.
@JollyGiant198 ай бұрын
Wouldn’t be the first time 😂
@adriannudelman45198 ай бұрын
Totally agree! 😅
@clpzdev8 ай бұрын
😭
@DooMRunneR8 ай бұрын
As a senior data center engineer in a multi billion dollar enterprise I really enjoy such content (with a bit of envy), while we still have to deal with the old school netapp metro clusters, HPE XP8 or IBMs SAN volume controllers you guys can play with the innovative stuff, even if its totally overkill for your usecase.
@willie694208 ай бұрын
"I'm holding your server" "Is it on Wi-Fi?" Absolutely amazing
@laci5078 ай бұрын
Let's be honest, that is quite a reasonanble thing to ask in that situation, I would do the same
@speeder32358 ай бұрын
bless u mark
@MrFluteboy19808 ай бұрын
"this, Jen, is the internet" "Oh. Why are there no wires!??" "It's wireless!!"
@JoonasD68 ай бұрын
@@MrFluteboy1980 Gotta remember to view that episode every once in a while. Thanks.
@lpseem37707 ай бұрын
More importantly, I am totally not grounded with a rack and I want to hug it with my ears. ZAP!
@HanTheGreatInventor8 ай бұрын
I get it now. You need two of everything for proper redundancy. Elijah can drop stuff when Linus isn't there. Elijah can mess stuff up when Dennis isn't there. Good hire, LMG.
@ZlotyCK898 ай бұрын
You need to hire third to get full HA set !
@timeimp8 ай бұрын
THE INTRO HAS RETURNED. Thank you Dan.
@Eli-zb2yj8 ай бұрын
It's not done until it's dan
@mdneilson8 ай бұрын
I cry happy tears a little every time
@doxastoel8 ай бұрын
I missed it
@timschulz95638 ай бұрын
Isn't it in every longer video?
@maxanimator95478 ай бұрын
that and Linus' beard, it truly feels like 2018 again
@anvecom8 ай бұрын
My home desktop cannot lose data as well - in the sense that if something were to fail, I'm too broke to afford redundant storage. Enterprise reliability is nuts, it's great to watch :)
@Bierkameel8 ай бұрын
This not enterprise but small business junk. Enterprise storage is dedicated like Netapp, EMC Unity, 3par and many others.
@HyviaVideoitaMansenlale8 ай бұрын
@@BierkameelTell me more
@spaceghostmiid8 ай бұрын
you'd be surprised at how cheap redundancy can be. i got a 16 tb external i use to backup anything important/excessively large for like 150 dollars. you can pick up a cheap 1tb external for like 30 dollars or less on sale, and that's pretty much all you need to back up your really important shit unless you do video editing/raw photo editing.
@Milsparro8 ай бұрын
100GB of Google is $2/mth
@morosis828 ай бұрын
@@Bierkameelthose systems can be implemented with small numbers of nodes also, they are not by definition better than this, but in large enterprises are built at scale and spread across racks or even separate buildings. You could do that with this setup too, they just don't need to.
@M3t4lstorm7 ай бұрын
As someone who built software like Weka for ~8 years, I appreciate how excited you are about these insanely complex systems and the performance they bring.
@jasonkramer85368 ай бұрын
This is easily one of the most beneficial and practical uses of AI I've seen. Eliminating the tedious work of sifting through thousands of hours of content to find something relevant? Yes, please.
@frankie1371378 ай бұрын
My favorite LTT videos are the ones with Jake explaining networking that I do not understand at all
@benwu79808 ай бұрын
There are so many terms or protocols involved when actually dig into 'networking' , they can't really delve too far into them since are (mostly) very niche. Stuff like going with SMB should be explained more in a video like this.
@chimpslow1918 ай бұрын
Absolutely agree because that is also me
@kreuner118 ай бұрын
Rly not that difficult
@frankie1371378 ай бұрын
@@kreuner11 sick dude
@frankie1371378 ай бұрын
@@benwu7980 if I really want to know more about something I can just give it a goog. These videos are perfect the way they are right now. I think they’re really fun. I’m a simple man; if Jake is excited in a video then I’m excited watching it.
@nocloo68298 ай бұрын
Videos like this are proof that Jake is a very valuable employee. Guy knows his IT stuff.
@AtiqSamtia8 ай бұрын
And he gets to play with the newest stuff like toys ;)
@ChristopherHallett8 ай бұрын
Yep! Yvonne's husband's boyfriend is pretty great at his job!
@bloodangel138 ай бұрын
And god bless him for trying to make every server in that company Linus proof.
@GrugGaming8 ай бұрын
@@ChristopherHallett LOL 😂
@chaozzah8 ай бұрын
The best part is - he probably didn't know a lot about it, but he figured it out. Also, the storage isn't really redundant since it's in the same rack, in the same building, in the same continent :D It never ends!
@matthewjalovick8 ай бұрын
Okay… the server was neat but HOLY COW that sorta AI search program thing at the end was unbelievable. One of the coolest products I’ve ever seen. That’s an actual game changer for folks who have a lotttttt of data and through which it’s not easy to search.
@wasituzayer97288 ай бұрын
Object recognition using machine learning isn't exactly a new concept, but I guess no one did an implementation like this before? 🤷♂
@nunoaguiar25258 ай бұрын
I wish KZbin had a search like that. Some times I'm searching for something to use as joke or whatnot and only "popular content" appears.
@marchtimed8 ай бұрын
@@nunoaguiar2525 a search feature like that implemented into youtube would be huge, people would cry over ai being used, but it would be huge
@leonro8 ай бұрын
@@nunoaguiar2525It will take a long time, but I'm sure we'll reach that point in the future 5-20 years with youtube search.
@Ooga6588 ай бұрын
@@wasituzayer9728object recognition was cool, but scene recognition is off the charts
@oldfarmerman8 ай бұрын
I must say, Linus Tech Tips has truly outdone themselves this year! The improvement in content quality is simply outstanding. It's incredibly noticeable how much work you've put into enhancing everything from writing to video production. The videos now are on a whole new level of coolness! Guys, you were good before, but now you're next-next-next level! Kudos to the LTT team for continuously raising the bar and delivering top-notch content.
@scientist1007 ай бұрын
He has a full team that coordinates this for him; it does really pay off to have a great team to make content together.
@Respectable_Username8 ай бұрын
"What could go wrong?" "I mean, a lot." Ah, it's always a good sign when those words are being said on the _other_ side of the screen 😂 Glad to see Jake back again! Had been thinking it's been a while
@jordanhildebrandt37058 ай бұрын
That Epyc CPU could hold the entire system memory of a Win 2000 machine in its L3 cache. Can you even imagine how fast it would be if your entire kernel AND workload is in CPU cache, and main memory isn't even being used!? That's wild.
@Gift0r8 ай бұрын
Yes, BUT. It still needs to hold the necessary data and operations as well, otherwise you will run around with your shoe laces tied together.
@katrinabryce8 ай бұрын
I think it would hold the entire system memory of a modern FreeBSD or Debian machine, certainly it would for Alpine.
@defeqel65378 ай бұрын
Windows 95 used something like 16MB, and could run on less IIRC
@morosis828 ай бұрын
If you get the stacked cache versions you can get just over 1.1GiB of L3 cache per CPU. The new AMD stuff is nuts.
@katrinabryce8 ай бұрын
@@defeqel6537 Minimum was 4MB, recommended mimimum was 8MB.
@quattro_vp8 ай бұрын
cannot lose data, until Linus somehow manages to drop it eventually
@Daniel-zy1ir8 ай бұрын
14:05 Linus' face when everything is gone
@shaunlavoie61838 ай бұрын
Beat me to it lol
@kurtmayer20418 ай бұрын
i mean they're ssds, a drop should do basically nothing ... right?
@Smitty_Werbenjagermanjenson8 ай бұрын
if you know about databases, you can absolutely drop data!
@user-cz9jf1ec8s8 ай бұрын
I mean hopefully if he drops it only the 1s will fall out since they weigh more than the 0s.
@ohareport8 ай бұрын
THE MAGIC OF BUYING TWO OF THEM: like all proper nerds of this vintage, the idea of anything being dual is just ruddy exciting: dual cpu, dual hard disk, dual gpu, dual dual server with dual dual dual dual psu…
@invisi14078 ай бұрын
I can't read that first line without thinking about Alec from Technology Connections. 🤣He's said that so many times in his videos. :D
@WackoMcGoose8 ай бұрын
@@invisi1407 I think he's the one that originally began calling it "the _magic_ of buying two of them"? Unless he's quoting it from an even older show...
@someoneelse50058 ай бұрын
Technology Connections gonna sue LTT at this point
@utsav55818 ай бұрын
watc interet anarchist
@invisi14078 ай бұрын
@@WackoMcGooseI think that was just all Alec. :D If you google the sentence, the whole first page is basically references to T.C. :D
@clarkcaraway99128 ай бұрын
Jake looks fantastic and I'm so proud of him and the effort he has clearly put in. Good on you man.
@jfmezei8 ай бұрын
The concept of cluster voting was developped by Digital Equipment Corp in the 1980s for its VMS clusters. The votes and quorum mechanism did not handle just failure of a node, but more importantly prevented a node that left the cluster from continuing to function (thus proventing it from accessing drives without enforcing locks/synchrinization with the other nodes). (called cluster partitioning). In the case of a 2 node cluster, you could designate a drive as quorum disk and give it votes, so any node in the cluster that still saw that/those drives would get the votes and could then continue. (in VMS clusters, drives could either be served by a node (and accessed from other nodes via network) or be standalone with direct hardware links to each node. (Digital developped extention to SCSI (called DSSI) to allow multiple hosts to access the same SCSI bus so multiple nodes coul write directly to the same physical drives). (later on, I beleive SCSI did get that functionality). The freezing of a node to prevent partitioning is very clitical to prevent a node that lost its connection to the other nodes from continuing to write to disks or perform tasks without the synchronization with the other cluster nodes. (in a cluster, there was a single lock database so when a process on a node too a lock on a file (or area of file) or a resource, that lock would exist on all nodes so processes on other nodes would not get that lock until first one released it). From a failover POV: You can have 2 nodes doing work since the locking is synchronized, so when one node fails, the other one continues and new network connectiosn all go to the second node instead of being split between the two. The other way is to have node 1 take and get lock and do all the work. Node 2 requests the lock but is put on hold because lock is unavailable. When node 1 goes down, node 2 gets the lcok and then processes all the work. Tandem NonStop (used for mission critical stuff such as Interac/credit card) has different fault tolerance. In the same chassis, a process would run on a single CPU/RAM, but a copy would run on a designated CPU/RAM, but basically have it writes to disk/network disabled. Both processes got the same data from network/disk. So the backup was a copy of the main one, and shoudl main one go down, the backup tok over right where the backup failed since the backup had identical RAM, process state and conections to network etc. However, while VMS clusters could be spread across multiple buildings (and up to 96 nodes), the Tandem Nonstop was within a single chassis in 1 computer room. so fault tolerant within chassis, but not disaster tolerant. A mere smb file server just blindly executes writes/reads from any node to any area of disk/file and when you have different windows instances accessing the same time, the last one writing to it wins.
@caseyberger158 ай бұрын
I’m so glad you finally made this video. I have always wondered how the editors find relevant archive footage. You’re telling me it was just from memory this whole time?!
@LinusTechTips8 ай бұрын
Lol pretty much.... For most of our history we've been a very small company. A dedicated person to ingest and apply metadata was not realistic. - LS
@dougle038 ай бұрын
Probably mostly your memory Linus...@@LinusTechTips
@KingLarbear8 ай бұрын
@@LinusTechTipsthat sounds like a hard thing to do
@ethanlieske96788 ай бұрын
To Add to the split brain talk, you need an odd number of nodes to guarantee they can reach quorum. Running only 3 nodes also creates issues when there is a failure as you now can't reach quorum and need to immediately get the node back up. When running 5//7/9 nodes outages are not nearly as urgent .
@jono63798 ай бұрын
So why go with 8?
@ethanlieske96788 ай бұрын
@@jono6379 modern voting algorithms should handle even node counts above 2 fine , though I have always built clusters in its sets out off habit.
@Bassalicious8 ай бұрын
@@jono6379 1 failure -> 7 node quorum, 2 failures -> 5 node quorum? Am I understanding this correctly?
@samuelkent74828 ай бұрын
My guess is when you have more servers, the load on each is decreased, such that occasionally one can take a backseat. So with an even number of servers, by this logic, the failure of one server would not compromise the process and it would function as normal since the “extra” would not be needed right away and thus have more time to get resolved and back up and running. Networking allows the servers to handoff tasks to neighboring servers in the network. This is also why it was mentioned in this video that “two entire servers” can go down and not cause an issue and nobody would even notice. Also, the odd number discrepancy to check for biases, that’s usually an ideal for if you have multiple tasks computing at once that put the network of servers at full load, but otherwise an even number will still work fine as one is backup.
@Kobay3508 ай бұрын
8:25 linus gesturing with the server sent chills down my spine.
@fallingmars508 ай бұрын
I thought only I was freaking out
@chuckpoe52978 ай бұрын
My arm instinctively twitched as if to reach out and catch it
@ashleyobrien49378 ай бұрын
@@chuckpoe5297 this is what you get when money and goods mean nothing to him...he simply doesn't give a dam..
@Jouniii8 ай бұрын
fr
@squidwardo70748 ай бұрын
u can even see his arm shaking
@snowblind6308 ай бұрын
See you guys in a year when the server loses data
@jpulley8 ай бұрын
Jake is the kind of employee that brings real value to an organization. Vote party for maximum raise at performance review time! 👏🏾👏🏾💯🔥
@danielberglv2598 ай бұрын
Last time you lost data it was not because of lack of failsafes, but rather the fact that no one was keeping an eye on things. This may prevent failures when something goes wrong, but only if you actually respond to those failures in time. Make sure to have some sort of alert system this time around.
@rootgremlin27468 ай бұрын
This, aaaaand no experiments or fancy *new* tech, it HAS TO alert someone, no use if alerting itself is down
@mysteryboyee8 ай бұрын
They have actual sysadmins now fyi, like not just some of the editors or whatever happen to also be good at this stuff (such as emily for example) but like they've been hiring actual dedicated IT staff
@danielberglv2598 ай бұрын
@@mysteryboyeeThat may be, but monitoring is something that they should probably cover at some point in a video like this. Redundancy is not just about hardware. And having sysadmins does not change anything besides the fact that they would know to setup ways to monitor the situation, unless they sit on a chair on front of the server rack at all times.
@funderburke438 ай бұрын
The red flashing light only works until you get tired of it crying wolf, and that will probably happen before a failure
@mnxs8 ай бұрын
@@danielberglv259One would presume that dedicated sysadmin staff would indeed have it as part of their job description to actually do such things. They would be unfathomably stupid not to.
@sebastienpiechurski56868 ай бұрын
Great to see professional server stuff shown to the public. One small correction though: even though the ConnectX-6 cards have 2x200G ports, the card itself is limited to a total of 200G by its chip, and both ports have to share the total bandwidth.
@RumenBlack8 ай бұрын
They did mention the total bandwidth limitation on those cards.
@NetherLad8 ай бұрын
Dad, and son nerding out over servers. Warms my heart
@jpulley8 ай бұрын
That axle AI is crazy! Can't wait to see more historical clips showing up in new videos!
@Bellenchia6 ай бұрын
Having an engineer like Jake around can make a world of difference for your company
@MoldyMcdonut8 ай бұрын
You're killing me linus 8:27 like holy you made my heart drop.
@UnExile8 ай бұрын
Stop kissing his ass.. hi Linus 😂
@PurpleCh4lk8 ай бұрын
@@UnExile huh?
@SilentDecode8 ай бұрын
I REALLY want a Floatplane extra for this which dives DEEP into this stuff. I don't care if it's 3,5 hours long like the FP Exclusive of Kyle. THIS. IS. AWESOME!
@ianhoyt26388 ай бұрын
It makes me so happy seeing the intro in so many new videos. It's the best intro on youtube, and screw viewer retention, I will watch it!
@sakurazero36418 ай бұрын
My words brother. It should be herecall the time it is legendary
@MrHaggibear8 ай бұрын
The one thing I really take away from this one: "New-new-new-new-new-new-new-new-new-Whonnock goes REAL BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!" The amount of knowledge and expertise involved in these projects exceeds my level of computing soooo far at this point^^ Still fun to watch!
@Ecofg8 ай бұрын
I remember the first video from Linus Tech Tips that got me hooked to the channel - the first Petabyte project. Even after all these years it is still as entertaining as it ever was to watch these guys do what they enjoy. Thanks to Linus Media Group, I am now pursuing a career in IT. I feel grateful to have come across this channel because it has formed who I am as a person now. Keep up the good work.
@user-wl7dt1uw2e7 ай бұрын
Was this a sponsored comment?
@KingAzaz8 ай бұрын
I absolutely love these server oriented videos! Please never shy away from doing more! I almost wish you guys had a specialized channel for this kind of stuff and just let Jake geek out. Great stuff, LTT!
@giannolamichael8 ай бұрын
I just decommissioned something similar at work about 2 months ago these are awesome and super reliable. The ones we decommissioned were used for high availability to radiology records in a major hospital, ran for 7 years with no issue and was only replaced for a standard life cycle upgrade of the system!
@davidgoodnow2698 ай бұрын
I love auctions!
@squidwardo70748 ай бұрын
So when you upgrade is that the only time it goes down?
@giannolamichael8 ай бұрын
@squidwardo7074 in our case yes. Because of the high availability of data it would take in our case 6 simultaneously failing servers to cause an outage. Or 2 simultaneously failing access switches with 2 simultaneously failing links for each server connected to each switch
@smarouchoc73008 ай бұрын
this is a great video to show how AI could be useful in an SMB - Small to Medium Business, not the shared drive :D I kinda wish you hadn't buried it 20 minutes into the video, but you had to, so we could see the technology that makes it reasonable to do. This is actually one of the most relevant videos of yours for me in what I do in my professional life. Good work.
@ciaduck8 ай бұрын
It would be interesting to see Ceph running on this thing. CERN uses Ceph for data from the LHC.
@DctrGizmo8 ай бұрын
That software they use to search for videos is insane! It's pretty impressive at how accurate their searches were and how the thumbnails matched.
@StjepanTreger8 ай бұрын
...the ending is pure gold: "..see all the lights, they never stopped blinking." :D such a powerful statement, so true for any debugging process no matter who you are!
@slamburger8 ай бұрын
That time jump at the beginning hooked me like a fish and I watched the whole video I love infrastructure content and other business related IT! I could watch it all day.
8 ай бұрын
THE INTRO IS BACK PEOPLE!
@UnifiedInfo8 ай бұрын
So are the quality viewers lol. Been drawing me back in last week or so
@icosli57988 ай бұрын
These networking server infrastructure videos are my guilty pleasure
@ArthurBugorski7 ай бұрын
I'd love a video on the evolution of Whonnock over time. I think that's good for learning how to evolve our home server storage over time. Fun fact: one of the Whonnock videos was the first LTT video I ever saw.
@jonnathan7808 ай бұрын
Genuinely need so much more of jake and this awesome nerdy server content.
@alexmartinelli62318 ай бұрын
Oh wow! It's an actual use for large language models and training that's ethical, reasonable, and useful! Incredible!
@linuxares8 ай бұрын
Some C-suite at Supermicro when Linus and Jake pulled the servers. "Why do we work with these guys?" Then again, it proves how good the setup is!
@CaelanDeJager8 ай бұрын
It would be kinda sick to see an educational series on IT engineering and deployment given all of the amazing professionals working on projects like this on the front and back end.
@NavneetRao8 ай бұрын
15:43 Jake is referring to the fact that the latency accounts for the fact that they are using DPDK (Data Plane Development Kitty) to facilitate RDMA (Remote Direct Memory Access): basically running RDMA through software, and accounting for the latency as a result (I.e, in the userspace rather than at a kennel level). This is pretty fantastic!
@Idiomatick8 ай бұрын
This really sounds like an unsinkable ship! Good job guys!
@LinusTechTips8 ай бұрын
Jinxed it! - LS
@thefifth11058 ай бұрын
LOVE THE RETURN OF THE INTRO
@ilhamkazimzadeisyourproducer8 ай бұрын
Is returned? I guess I was watched a lot of old videos of linus 😅😅
@vffa8 ай бұрын
@@ilhamkazimzadeisyourproducer I don't get it either. Isn't that the normal intro?
@MoPaTography8 ай бұрын
@@vffaa few months ago/last year supposedly their KZbin metrics said they were losing viewer attention during the intro, so they stopped adding it in. It was mentioned on the wan show. However personally I feel it gives the LTT a character like a proper TV show. I love it!
@noswear23468 ай бұрын
Jake and server upgrade video ? My favorite ngl more jake pls
@Exilum8 ай бұрын
Seeing the software made me really wish for someone to build a consumer storage classifier. Like just that part, you could point it to a file in your regular file system, give it somewhere to store all the generated information, and be able to manage all your pictures and videos.
@LutraLovegood8 ай бұрын
Last time I checked you technically could use a business solution, but it wasn't cheap. Maybe there are cheap consumer options now though.
@RonakDhakan8 ай бұрын
This is the kind of stuff that is exciting for me in IT. Although I would not go this extreme and aim for maximum value for money, it is fun to watch.
@insu_na8 ай бұрын
Also check out Ceph I'd say. It's neat.
@Waitwhat4698 ай бұрын
ever storage video I want them to check out ceph. Rook ceph is super powerful imho.
@thefifth11058 ай бұрын
Now, for true redundancy, do a nightly mirror/backup over fiber optic or microwave link to an identical setup in the labs building. Call it Whonnock 10_2. God forbid another UPS or power bus catch fire in the server room. Or Linus pull 3 servers for a fail over demo by mistake.
@DG8RS8 ай бұрын
Yep. The first thing I thought is "WHY IS IT IN THE SAME RACK?!??!"
@Aizakou8 ай бұрын
Finally somone pointing this out, i thought i was the crazy one here
@garethd37418 ай бұрын
Using Ceph you can define your failure domain and run a cross datacenter cluster. The failure domain is scalable, so right now I run a disk level failure domain at home, but in a bit I'll move to host level failure domain (once I add a few more hosts)
@macking1048 ай бұрын
Not good enough..l they need backup in another part of Canada or US. That area will someday have a big earthquake off the coast and that will sever fiber optic lines and cause major power outages, etc…
@brad20648 ай бұрын
Need multiple geographically diverse fiber links also, preferably to a mirror site in another city/region.
@jonathanstyles96018 ай бұрын
Obligatory ceph mention
@MattSitton8 ай бұрын
Yeah ceph is great I have a 3 node deployment of it that's been going strong for years
@brockwilkie60223 ай бұрын
yeah, given that they use TrueNAS most of they time so probably won't be going with super expensive Weka long term, or similar competition. He did mention TrueNAS cluster but TrueNas says it is based on Gluster and that support is degraded at this point. I fell Ceph would be most appropriate, and I REALLY would like to see the video for how they pull that.
@north.8 ай бұрын
The camera man took my tip I am so happy :)
@kevinparnell41478 ай бұрын
Jake your weight loss is very apparent in this video, you're looking very good and healthy! Keep up the great work I know you're working hard :)
@blancfilms8 ай бұрын
I love when LTT does server stuff. Keep em coming PLEASE
@JackOEllingham8 ай бұрын
Jake with a full beard is a much better look for him!
@alexdavis93248 ай бұрын
Jake looked much better overall in this video. Our boi is growing up
@AliceAWilson8 ай бұрын
nah facial hair looks worse on all men.
@peterparker-zy9oe8 ай бұрын
@@AliceAWilsoncan't be further from the truth
@graham10348 ай бұрын
Now Linus just needs to grow one and all will be well with LMG
@iceman117668 ай бұрын
Whonnock 10 Last whonnock ever, until whonnock 11
@LtdJorge8 ай бұрын
That axle AI thing is for now the most useful application of AI I’ve seen.
@SilentKaliSmoker8 ай бұрын
I don't know why, but I forget how much networking/nas that Jake knows. When he's the one setting most of it up. Good job Jake.
@Emell098 ай бұрын
Thank you for including the intro again :D all i got to say atm :P
@NathanAtkinson5908 ай бұрын
3 years from now: How we lost all our data
@kg4wwn8 ай бұрын
So we let Elijah plug in a network cable and ...
@jprsfragoso8 ай бұрын
Linus: "Here it is, the final form" _Less then 1 year later_ Linus:
@haves_8 ай бұрын
20:40 OK that is definitely the best feature so far, this era of information there are lots, but to actually get one that is relevant is the true power.
@ReclaimerTyphoon8 ай бұрын
My mind was blown by the storage/infrastructure itself... then they started talking about that INSANE search ability, and I can't even. It's SO FREAKIN' COOL.
@danieljames5008 ай бұрын
really enjoying the intro being back!
@oourdumb8 ай бұрын
"They don't know what HA means" Me.. working in IT for 25 years: "HA means nothing if its not distributed and works as a failover cluster in a DR event" TLDR; It's still not secure, it's not protected against floods, fires, or other disasters. It still lives in a closet. The system needs to be distributed physically before it can be called HA.
@nickfarley22688 ай бұрын
If the LTT office floods I don’t think off site high availability storage will help because LTT does not have a redundant video editing team.
@oourdumb8 ай бұрын
@@nickfarley2268 That's not true, the team could just be moved to a temporary location with remote access to the files... that's the whole point of a DR plan. In the event his whole team dies during the flood, sure... you're right, but that would be quite a flood :) A strong power surge could take down his whole "high availability" setup... not exactly HA.
@maxhennessy66768 ай бұрын
@@oourdumb True but it also comes down to cost Vs risk this is a big calculation a business must take.
@gonzalomartinez32378 ай бұрын
Excellent comment. Really excellent. The serious stuff for HA is not interesting for a general audience. Is pretty boring, even for us IT professionals. Is not "cost vs risk", it doesn't have the features for being redundant and secure. Is like building "the world's most powerfull PC" with $200, and then argue that well... it has prioritized costs... A recomendation? Just do it right, and if it is not right for a video, don't make a video about it, period.
@oourdumb8 ай бұрын
@@maxhennessy6676 sure, but that doesn't make it HA... that's my point. You can't say "it's a discount HA", since there is a real name for it... just a failover cluster. Even if it load balances, still not HA. HA has many requirements and physical distribution is one...
@kevincaparas0138 ай бұрын
26:52 "Is this on Wi-Fi?" -Mark 2024 🤣
@InstaMealGaming8 ай бұрын
Honestly that Ai clip searching feature is the first useful, non-harmful to creators, implementation of AI I have ever seen.
@thierrydekeyser85438 ай бұрын
Thank you Jake, for calling me awesome!! :D
@MrPruske8 ай бұрын
12:41 I laughed way harder than i should have at that linus pillow
@conanscomputer8 ай бұрын
Let’s get some popcorn and watch Linus drop it
@brinsonmcbride8 ай бұрын
Jake is looking great. Looks like he’s been hitting the gym quite a bit
@FigTreeCinemas3 ай бұрын
Jake loses weight with every video we see him in. If this is intentional, keep up the good work! If it isn't, I pray you stabilize toward a healthy goal weight. ❤
@Respectable_Username8 ай бұрын
One thing I love about these server videos is that, unlike the high end PC builds you make, I might actually interact with one of these! Obviously not of my own, but as a professional software engineer deploying stuff for an employer. Even just making decisions based on what hardware bottlenecks will appear for different types of services! And the best part is not having to spend your own money on the outcome 😂
@melvinruijters96898 ай бұрын
What if the building just loses power
@wildorb12098 ай бұрын
They got WEKA?!? I'm so jealous! I've always wanted to use this but you just can't run it for the homelab!!!! P.S. How do you backup a weka-system?
@anonymousgooglereviewer98908 ай бұрын
It supports snapshotting and backing up to object storage
@Bpinator8 ай бұрын
Weka is cool but you can run ceph in a homelab
@4RILDIGITAL8 ай бұрын
The capabilities of WCA are mind-blowing, and the potential for AI-assisted search is really promising.
@whatwhat-7778 ай бұрын
I am a small homelabber, and I love only these types of videos from LMG....I watch all of their server room/ servers/ storage kind of videos. I first thought they were gonna use Ceph but looks like Weka is super cool too.
@brockwilkie60223 ай бұрын
Weka is super expensive I hear. It sounded like a fun experiment but I bet they go with a Ceph/TrueNAS type cluster given their background.
@SandstormCloudwave8 ай бұрын
Why don't you ceph?
@harrisongilbert8 ай бұрын
Cannot lose data… except when Linus has to be the one to replace a drive
@softwaredevelopinglotozip46178 ай бұрын
Is this used in any big projects?
@spencermpd8 ай бұрын
Anyone said how good Jake is looking now!! Wasn't ever bad, but good on you bro!!!!
@SKRUBL0RD8 ай бұрын
the truly nice feature to high availability is not even just the redundancy but also the fact that when you want to make upgrades or any kind of changes or even just performing a lot of software updates you can pull each machine 1 by 1 and do them in a localized setting so as to not create bottlenecks otherwise for everyone trying to read/write data constantly. something that Valve Corp hasn't even learned as in 2024 there are still a lot of downtime across all services on Steam every Tuesday.
@Kanizeeyt8 ай бұрын
Day 3 of asking for Scrapyard wars 9.
@Dameworth8 ай бұрын
Linus did say he had an idea for a scrapyard wars reboot
@Kanizeeyt8 ай бұрын
@@Dameworth then c'mon implement it already
@Crazydanny498 ай бұрын
Day 4 of asking Linus for his 4090
@MoPaTography8 ай бұрын
God I love the intro coming back to LTT videos! That cut from the intermission bleep to the intro had me lmao 🤣 1:38
@AussalBurn8 ай бұрын
i love seeing the intro again
@VanBourner8 ай бұрын
that AI indexing of videos to search scenes based on prompt is massive
@Denstoradiskmaskinen8 ай бұрын
Love the server hardware videos.. keep em coming! Supermicro web browsing, just for fun do exist
@rozaj20028 ай бұрын
I have no idea about servers or storage but i still enjoy watching these
@TreyMoss8 ай бұрын
Until Linus said, "It would cost 50$ for 1 minute of downtime in payroll alone." I didn't really understand how much overhead he has. I'm a idiot so I probably did the math wrong, but there's 480 minutes in a day × that by 50, you get 24,000$ a day at least. So I 100% understand the need/want for daily uploads
@Nalianna8 ай бұрын
Jake has come a LONG way. He's REALLY impressive as a presenter.
@TheGeistKing8 ай бұрын
Can you guys do a recap video of the realistic timeline/data requirements for an ongoing business that compliments this video by recapping every video like this one in your past(like all 7 or so with the title "we don't have enough space", "winnock server died", "we're upgrading again!") You've done many of these videos with the same theme, and a long term analysis of "Did we meet the goals we set out to achieve" with these upgrades over the past decade would be very fascinating and useful for the industry. Obv you are a special case since you output video but it would be cool to get some insight on both the long term decision making and how it's changed every time you do one of these.
@charlie_nolan8 ай бұрын
This video totally blew my mind... I didn't know technology was thus fast yet