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I am considering this in the context of proxmox - what is your workflow for LXC, may I ask?

Tried various routes. Currently using bash scripts straight against the proxmox host. So lots of this

pct exec $CTID -- sh -c "mkdir test"

I've got a script that makes an arch lxc and turns it into a template.

And then bash scripts that deploys it with whatever custom stuff is needed (volume mounts, podman, files pushed into container etc).

Also a pacoloco server (arch/pacman cache) so that all the building and updating for everything is fast & not hitting the upstreams unnecessarily.

Terraform or Ansible also works for this but decided bash is ultimately less moving parts


Worth checking out meshtastic and their ecosystem of much longer range mesh tech.

https://meshtastic.org/docs/hardware/devices/


This is a direct path to a central bank (digital) currency that they are the depository institution for individuals.


https://ipfs.io sans the filecoin aspect that creates incentives for long term/proven storage of data is what you are likely asking for.



I wanted to use this, but its two tear stale with no release, seems unsupported and likely to fall into being unuseful as other models and tools exponential get better, sadly.


Is the zero reserve ratio requirement what you are referring to here? Thus allowing banks working directly with the Fed to have zero "real" dollars in existence for customer deposits?

I believe this is not true for all banks, but surely is shocking that this measure is in place, as it is unclear what holds those primary banks from lending to any extent they wish. I must be missing something.


Yeah, that's what I'm talking about.

Here is the url for reference if anyone wants to look at it https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/reservereq.htm

It doesn't look to me like there is anything holding them back from loaning as much money as they want regardless of the risk now.


There is something holding them back.

Check this out

https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/bcre...

  The Board's stress tests help ensure that large banks can support the economy during economic downturns. The tests evaluate the resilience of large banks by estimating their capital levels, losses, revenue and expenses under hypothetical scenarios over nine future quarters.
Banks that lend with abandon would fail this test. This automatically means they can”t distribute dividends or do share buy-backs. Which in turn makes shareholders unhappy. They either vote the CEO out, or sell their shares to buy shares of banks that give dividends. That”s called “voting with your feet”. Results in stock tanking, then CEO out.


I hadn't seen that, thanks.

I try to always keep a healthy level of skepticism with these things.

I'll have to dive into this in more detail tomorrow as it is now quite late and I spent most of my time deep diving/corroborating research from the recently released BiS report regarding the off-balance sheet, 85 trillion in USD denominated FX market swap liabilities, which supposedly are expiring in 12 months.

Looked real bad, but its too early to draw any kind of sentiment/market speculation without a lot more research.

This is the report I was checking out. https://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt2212h.htm


I heard about this report, but I don't really understand what they mean. The BIS does a triennial survey of the FX markets [1], which they just released. It's a bit rich to say the FX markets lack transparency. What are they doing then in that survey?

Make no mistake, the Fed, and other regulators, have full visibility of what banks do. Every dollar they lend, every derivative, every repo, every mortgage, everything.

With the annual CCAR exercise, banks send a huge amount of information to the Fed. Not only numbers, but documents as well. A large bank will send tens of thousands of pages in one year. And countless number of spreadsheets with lots and lots of numbers.

A lot of these numbers have to be disclosed to the public as well. This way the banks are not subject to only regulatory supervision, but to market discipline as well. That's by design. The financial regulations rules were overhauled over the last decade and a half, and this is one of its pillars, the disclosure and market discipline.

If you are curious, here's [2] the full Basel framework in all its glory. Almost 1700 pages. Of course, this is just the tip of the iceberg. The actual regulations go into the hundreds of thousands of pages.

[1] https://www.bis.org/statistics/rpfx22.htm

[2] file:///Users/viorelcosteanu/Downloads/BaselFramework.pdf


So the main issues I've been able to gather are they weren't required to report the liabilities on the balance sheets which are where most formulas for policymakers get their data from, many are only reported only in the footnotes. Still working my way through it.

The obvious issue, and worry is financial contagion.

There are so many USD denominated swaps outstanding, that will need to be paid back in full plus interest in the same short time horizon with USDs (12 months), and the global amount of USDs available in circulation falls far short of the currency needed to fulfill the obligations.

Also, thanks to interest rate changes, you have it behaving in some respects like an underwater variable interest rate mortgage if they try to roll it forward, it acts in many respects similar to a naked options contract with exponential losses as we are already going into a global recession.

The worry, is the balance of payments crises that these will likely develop into if a default/liquidity issue occurs. Then there is also the matter of actually settling the issue as the amount exceeds what the dealers and swap banks would be able to absorb or cover.

The mechanics seem to be somewhat similar to what happened with the naked shorting on Gamestop above the float, you get a squeeze but on a much larger scale since its all US notes and dollars.

It can potentially lock the entire system up by depriving foreign markets of sufficient USDs needed to pay back their obligations in that time horizon (liquidity crisis).

The relative yield of the dollar to other currencies would skyrocket uncontrollably, and due to the energy sectors close ties with the petro-american dollar, those products would also likely skyrocket as well, unless OPEC nations decide to take a loss (they historically almost never have done that).

Exchange rates due to the shock would be un-affordable to most contries, and the USD for the global reserve currency could potentially be abandoned if rates become inequitable for an extended period for foreign trade.

Its a real knifes edge between maintaining the global reserve currency by printing enough to fulfill the obligations which could cause Weimar like inflation domestically, or abandoning the trade status, military bases, UN votes, and other leverage we commonly use which are largely derived from debt obligations after a unofficial default, which have been provided through various entities such as IMF and World bank investments.

I still have a lot more to dig into it, but just as a casual observation, it looks like some group of people are trying to create the economic factors described in Ayn Rand's book Atlas Shrugged.


The lifetime cost being on par will. No power factor in itself will do that.


This has been bypassed by employees when money is involved. https://www.technadu.com/verizon-number-lock-protection-agai...



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