Cool, now I have to find something else to sync my Obsidian vault to my phone. It just worked! Fuck. =____=
Cool, now I have to find something else to sync my Obsidian vault to my phone. It just worked! Fuck. =____=
Neat! I wonder how long it’ll be before we see it in a screenshot on !unixporn@lemmy.ml.
It can’t! It’s too busy doing 500 km of burn-in after making it through testing. :(
Never join a robotics startup, lol. You will have to go to standup and it will be useless and annoying basically every time.
Yeah! It lets me focus on content instead of building the actual site so I thought I would suggest it given OP’s use case.
Also the CSS can be modified with a separate file that overrides the default, so it’s pretty customizable without touching the actual config files at all.
Have you considered a wiki instead? I use OtterWiki and I like it a lot. It has version control using Git too.
There are several dozen different wiki softwares out there, you can compare their features using this site.
Can you explain your opinion of the differences? A friend and I are interested in learning more about Discord alternatives that we can get our less tech-savvy friends to switch to.
Hmm, I tried it out after seeing this but I’m not really much of a fan of the mobile-first approach. I’ve moved on to HortusFox and it’s more what I was expecting.
My wife is the one who’ll be using it though, so we’ll see if she likes it.
I’m aware, that’s why I specifically phrased it as a consideration and not, like, “wow, those people are dumb and should switch to Linux immediately!”
Again, if you feel a certain way about my comment and think it said something it didn’t, that’s not on me.
I even said this software is a good thing for people using Windows.
I don’t recall where I said everyone should or can switch. I said they should be considering it. If you’re feeling pressured that’s not on me.
I fully expect a Windows update to break this somehow. Good for this dev though and it’ll be nice to have this software out there. Hopefully they don’t have to fight against Microsoft’s bullshit just to grow a user base.
Anyone who uses this should be considering switching to Linux though. Maybe that’s the dev’s long game. :b
Could also do yt-dlp -S "res:1080"
- it works with vertical videos too (will scale using the smallest dimension).
Yeah, I could never get NPM to work right on my system either. I use the NGINX Docker image and set up my certs manually.
If I were to do it all over again today, I would probably go with Caddy since it now has a bunch of that stuff built in with automatic HTTPS by default and the basic reverse proxy setup is literally 2 lines of code.
You could try Logseq, it’s like Obsidian but open source. I use Obsidian for most notes and I also have a personal wiki built with Otterwiki.
I use NGINX for my reverse proxy, you could check out NGINX Proxy Manager which uses Certbot to automate the SSL certificates.
I’ve heard a lot of people also like Caddy and Traefik. Can’t remember which is easier to use, maybe Caddy.
FWIW, these are effective only when both are used on the same circuit. If you live in an older home, the chances of this being the case are higher.
My entire apartment, except for the washroom, is on the same circuit. It also means I can’t run an air conditioner without tripping the breaker. :|
I use Cockpit to manage my system and containers and Dashy as a browser dashboard. It’s similar to Heimdall but more minimal.
I also run Otterwiki and I’m planning on documenting my setup, but I haven’t got around to it yet.
Then you can’t “hide” your server IP without a VPS/VPN set up. Maybe I’m not understanding what you’re asking? Your public IP is visible to any machine you connect to and that includes Cloudflare’s servers.
Are you worried about copyright or something? This isn’t legal advice, but I doubt they give a shit unless you’re hosting content illegally for a large number of people. Obviously, only take the risk if you are comfortable with the potential consequences where you live.
I’m not really knowledgeable about it, but there is an article from Tailscale that explains how they use SSH (basically it creates a separate SSH server specifically for Tailnet traffic). From what I understand, this feature is relatively new.
You may also want to look into Tailnet lock.
You could try Tailscale? It creates a secure tunnel to your server so you don’t have to connect it to the internet. Not sure if that checks all your boxes though.
Brave uses their own search index, so they are quite literally trying to do that.