Let's talk about the future of my Peertube instance...
subscribeto.me/videos/watch/f63e8886-b63e-480c-…
I love Peertube. I love the fediverse. I want this instance to continue. But I need your help.
The best way to support this instance is through The Bryant Blog.
Or you can become a Patron.
Thank you!
00:00 A little history about my Peertube instance
00:58 The problem I'm facing
01:24 The way I see it, there are only three options...
01:55 I need your help
03:10 The best way to help
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Comments from other communities
If it comes down to it- I know it's not ideal, but deleting old videos could give you the option to upload the deleted content to archive.org (rather than directing PT subscribers back to YouTube). Include a link in all videos to Archive indicating "classic videos" can be found there? That would allow you to continue your instance for new content and keep the old content archived. I know it's not ideal but I think that's what I'd do in your position (in absence of funding).
Can't contribute much, but I could give a penny or two if you added some crypto donations option (I live in a very sanctioned place and cannot pay by normal means). I believe this could yield some extra donations from others, too!
Also, in the subtitles, there in an incorrect link to your site at 2:32 - just a heads up so that viewers with subtitles could get to the right place!
Finally, an idea to explore - is S3 hosting the cheapest solution? While it's convenient to some extent, with the traffic you face and generally low stakes with this being a grassroots project, maybe throwing some old drives in two mirrored boxes would serve you better? I'm no expert, but $250/mo for hosting something like a hundred vids sounds insane to me. I know it's cool to have everything enterprise-grade, especially when you're a somewhat big YouTuber, but this could be a fun pet project, and it's not that we the PeerTubers aren't accustomed to some rough edges. You can make a trove of content out of it, too!
In any case, I wish you the best of luck!
You could just keep the last X no of vids on here and dump the old videos onto Archive.org or something. Do many people even watch older videos on this platform anyway? Even if they do I can see a case for just having a recent cache of your stuff here and delete the older stuff. It's still easy to find the older stuff elsewhere if needed.
Best of luck with the fundraising if not.
$250 per month sounds a bit excessive? My PeerTube instance hosts 100 videos including many feature films and it's only a fraction of that cost? I'm on managed hosting with Cloud68, maybe you could transfer over to them or a similar hosting service?
@fedivideo@fedi.video Maybe there's a better way to do this? Would it be possible to have an archival S3 on my homelab that contains all my videos and a main S3 that only has my most recent/popular videos? That would be ideal, honestly.
@gbryant@subscribeto.me I'm not a sys admin so I'm not sure of the technicalities, but the pricing for similar amounts of videos is way, way cheaper on managed hosting, and they're having to cover costs of tech support labour too. For example here's FediHost's pricing (no relation to me, just similar username) https://fedihost.co/pricing and here's Cloud68's pricing https://cloud68.co/managed-hosting/peertube
@gbryant@subscribeto.me I think you can just host them all on your homelab and have a public cache instance: https://docs.joinpeertube.org/contribute/architecture#redundancy-between-instances
@fedivideo@fedi.video
I think you're overpaying for hosting. I know of an instance that costs "over $200" to run (pony.tube/about/instance), but they have over 10k videos. @MakerTube talks about €0.025/GB/month. I think AWS stuff tends to be more expensive in general. But I don't know the requirements and configurations for peertube. Maybe ask around for other people who host it? @lety what do you think?
Small correction: I'm actually watching this from PieFed 😀
My recommendation is to migrate your instance to a local server where storage is extremely inexpensive (and where you presumably already archive your videos). Obviously there are considerations there but that's my recommendation, and it's what I do, personally.
720p videos are completely fine.
If you need to erase old videos, that would be the next best thing.
You can use a raspberry pi to host the instance from your home lab. If you don't want to expose your global IP directly, you can rent a cheap VPS to act as a buffer between your home network and the outside world. I do this using WireGuard to establish a tunnel between the VPS and my home network and then re-routing incoming connections to services hosted at home. This works even if your home's IP is dynamic, or if your ISP does not allow Port forwarding. Furthermore, you can isolate the raspberry pi from the rest of your local network if that's a concern.
@gbryant
I mostly don't watch your videos here, because they are loading very poorly even at 360p.
I'm only watching short clips at peertube on my phone.
For everything else I'm using my htpc.
Therefore I have YT Premium.
As far I know there is no Linux peer tube app that can be controlled by a harmony remote properly.
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@Bigfood@social.tchncs.de @bloodaxe@fosstodon.org I'm in Europe and Gardiner's videos load fine here? Perhaps there may be something between you and the instance causing problems?
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@bloodaxe@fosstodon.org Yeah, if you're mainly doing a talking video the image quality really doesn't matter. I think Chris Were did a video ages ago where he tried going down to 480p and it didn't matter because he just does talking videos.
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