What I Use

Folks,

Wishing you a Merry Christmas!

I was putting together a list of ‘What I Use’ tech things for the fun of it, and decided with the help of ChatGPT to organize it and clean it up for future employees.

Then I thought it would be fun to publish it here. So it is quite a bit, but I am hoping for a bit of discussion, and just in case others might want to do the same. To give you background, I live on 19 acres in California in the Sierra Nevada Foothills called ‘The Divide’, waking up in the middle of a forest each day with about 5 acres of its usable land for people things, the rest is great for nature walks.

I decided, about 4 months ago, to move my office out of my cramped ADU[Adult Dwelling Unit] to a 256 square feet unoccupied out building. It now houses my Linux PCs, a single 32″ Monitor, and two printers. I have those items on a network via a Deco mesh system. Oh, how do I love it, as I now have room. I still have my Windows 11 PC on two monitors in my ADU.

I hope this is fun for all!

What I Use — December 2025

(Hardware, networking, and recording tools that actually work)

I publish a “what I use†list from time to time. This is a practical, reliability-first setup, tuned for rural connectivity, quiet recording, and systems that don’t fight me.

Items marked with *** are planned / future additions, not yet deployed.

?ï¸ Core Computing

  • Primary Desktop (Windows 11)
  • High-performance desktop with ample RAM and a 2 TB SSD. Excellent for heavy workloads, though active cooling makes it less ideal for audio recording.
  • Lenovo Workstation (Ubuntu Server)
  • Older but powerful system repurposed as a server. Runs UFW, Samba, Docker, Cockpit, and Fail2Ban. Closed to incoming traffic.
  • Dell Optiplex (Linux Mint Cinnamon)
  • Lightweight Linux desktop paired with the Ubuntu server via KVM; stable and efficient.
  • KVM Switch (BDFFLY USB 3.0 HDMI, Dual Monitor)
  • Shares keyboard, mouse, and monitors between the two Linux systems. Works extremely well and reliably.
  • Secondary Laptops (2× Windows, Touchscreen)
  • Tested as script readers. Touchscreens work well, but fans can ramp unpredictably during recording.

?ï¸ Input Devices

  • INFINMIND Wireless Bluetooth Silent Mouse
  • Full-size ergonomic mouse with metal 4-way hyper-fast scroll wheel. Completely silent clicks and scrolling; adjustable DPI; multi-device capable.
  • Wired Mouse (Backup)
  • Traditional wired mouse kept connected for fallback and comparison.
  • Keyboards
  • Windows desktop: standard wired keyboard I’ve used for years
  • Linux systems: Perixx PERIBOARD-317 large-print, backlit keyboard (excellent)

?ï¸ Audio & Recording

  • FIFINE USB Condenser Microphone (K669W)
  • Proof that you don’t need expensive gear to sound good when starting out.
  • USB Isolator (Jhoinrch)
  • Used to reduce electrical noise during recording.
  • Microphone Pop Filter (MTPHOEY)
  • Simple, effective windscreen.
  • Mic Arm (TODI)
  • Well-built, clean design, easy setup, and excellent value for a desktop boom arm.
  • Ocenaudio
  • Primary audio editor. Recording at 48 kHz, mono, 24-bit; final export as 16-bit PCM with triangular dithering.

? Audio Practices & Environment

  • Noise-First Philosophy
  • Focus on eliminating repetitive mechanical noise (mouse clicks, fan noise) rather than every incidental human sound.
  • Silent Interaction Setup
  • Tuned mouse speed (~30–40%), subtle mouse trails enabled, CTRL key reveals pointer, reduced desk interaction while recording.

?ï¸ Displays & Reading

  • Primary Monitor qty 2 (Desktop)
  • Large monitor for script reading and editing, paired with a silent mouse.
  • Laptop as Script Reader (Explored)
  • Touchscreen scrolling preferred over trackpads; used as a full-screen digital “page.â€

? Networking

  • Starlink (Recommended for Rural Use)
  • Reliable option where wired internet is unavailable.
  • TP-Link Deco X55 Mesh System
  • 1 main node, 4 satellites, plus 1 outdoor Deco broadcasting to the plant nursery.
  • Mesh alone proved unreliable due to obstacles; moving to wired backhaul.
  • Wired Backhaul (Cat6A)
  • Decos will be daisy-chained with Cat6A Ethernet in conduit. Fiber was considered but cost-prohibitive. Conduit protects cable from sharp, gravel-heavy soil.

? Networking Hardware (Future / Planned)

  • Ubiquiti USW-Flex-2.5G-5 Switch ***
  • TP-Link TL-SG1005P PoE Switch ***
  • TP-Link ER605 V2 VPN Router ***
  • BV-Tech PoE+ Injector ***

? Cabling & Termination (Future / Planned)

  • trueCABLE Cat6A Direct Burial Cable (500 ft) ***
  • Cat6A Shielded Keystone Jacks ***
  • Cat6A Surface-Mount Boxes ***
  • TRENDnet Punch-Down Tool ***
  • Ethernet Cable Tester ***

?ï¸ Printing

  • Brother Networked Laser Printer
  • Reliable hardware; Windows may require re-adding after power cycles due to IP changes.
  • HP Inkjet Printer
  • Installed with multiple logical instances; less reliable in the present connectio, not primary.

? Storage & Power

  • WD 4 TB Elements External Drive
  • Used instead of a traditional NAS. Linux systems provide similar functionality; the drive itself is excellent.
  • APC BE425 UPS
  • Exceptional value for basic battery backup and surge protection.
  • Powered USB Hub (TP-Link UH720)
  • Rock-solid performance; highly recommended.

? Power & Protection

  • Belkin 12-Outlet Surge Protector
  • Smart outlet layout that actually lets you use all sockets.
  • CCCEI Heavy-Duty Metal Power Strip
  • Industrial-grade build for higher-draw areas.
  • LeMotech IP68 Cable Glands ***
  • Planned for strain relief and enclosure cable management.
  • Copper Mesh Rodent Control ***
  • Planned for cable protection in outdoor / conduit runs.

? Smart & Misc

  • Amazon Echo Devices (Show/Dots ×3)
  • Used mainly as radios and for light smart-home integration.
  • Amazon Fire Tablet
  • Consumption-only device.

Philosophy (Brief)

This setup favors quiet, reliability, and systems thinking over raw specs. Hardware is chosen to stay out of the way, work consistently in a rural environment, and scale gradually without forcing unnecessary complexity.

Thurrott