My own approach is to run vm/lxc of SSDs that's are hosted on proxmox directly.
Then I have a truenas with Nas storage. I mount that through SMB to proxmox and pass the different dirs into the vm/lxc that need them.
SSD are much better performance for vm/lxc.
Edit: even running the Nas as a vm i would mount it with SMB, making it easy to spilt them up later if you want. Also I have 10gbit netcards between the nas and proxmox.
Your son already knew.
When my daughter was 4 I asked her to say all the bad words she knew. She started with the not so bad ones and ended with all the worst ones.
I guess the other kids in her kindergarten had older siblings, so she knew them all already. But most importantly, she also knew when to use them and when not to use them. :)
Install proxmox, and play around with Linux containers, if it goes wrong just delete it and start over. Also installing change detection is quite easy using helper scripts: https://helper-scripts.com/scripts?id=Change+Detection
Living in Denmark, it's always so odd for me when health insurance is somehow connected to your job... Why?
Health is needed for anyone, both people who work and not. Why it only makes sense for everyone to have access for it, and everyone paying for it over taxes.
Keeping it connected with work is poodle giving the employers more power than they should have - they should not have any power over healthcare.
I've been using proxmox mainly with lxc containers for years. I gave an lxc running docker and portainer, for a few services I have running in docker.
I wouldn't do it with anything critical it anything that needs mich performance or resources. But honestly most things don't need that.
So is you like me just need a few docker containers and you already have everything else running - this can be a fine way to do it. Go for it :)
I have arr in lxc also, I just map a folder from the host into the lxc containers. It's working flawless, plus it's quite flexible.
I also have a few things running in docker, but if I can get it in lxc I do that.
And it's so easy doing with the scripts from the page I linked to you:)
Honestly I've been using Google play books for years, just upload pdf or epub and you have it on phone, ipad and computer. Plus it remembers how far you are on between devices.
Readarr for storing on own server, before I upload them.
@Kaavi
@lemmy.world