To cast them, it uses libvegs however. It is not available in any standard package libraries, so just quickly build it from source
To cast them, it uses libvegs however. It is not available in any standard package libraries, so just quickly build it from source
You could write your content in markdown and use pandoc to generate a html file. Add header/footer in template if you want
Jellyfin or funkwhale
Gitlab: For profit (wouldn’t say it’s much better than github)
Codeberg: Donations
Notabug: unclear
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Huh, sad to hear. Do the recipe sources have the recipe markup or is it parsed directly from html?
Does “image” refer to the docker image in your error?
Another thought: I use grocy (or at least try to use it) to have an overview of my stock and know when an open item in the fridge neeeds to be used before spoiling. But I just use a shared note on nextcloud for shopping, which is good enough for two people. But of course there is no meal planning or recipe management
For meal planning and shopping lists, grocy os completely overkill.
You could look at Kitchen Owl, it even looks like bring! and you can use meal planning :)
For me everything works fine since years, EXCEPT collabora. I use onlyoffice now, it’s much faster and very stable
I have nextcloud running since nearly 5 years and it never failed once. Only dowtime is when the backup fails and somehow maintenance mode is still enabled (technically not a crash)
For those interested: Running in docker with mariadb in a stack, checking updates with watchtower everyday and pulling from stable, backups with borg(matic)
They don’t anymore? XD
I use the public cloud with the smallest tier with storage to host a django app: https://pflaenz.li
It costs around 4$/month and runs great!
You can look at infomaniak, they host everything in Switzerland and use 100% green energy. They also build on open source standards in a lot of places.
But in the end, servers are power hungry and need a lot of rare earths, other minarals and large amounts of energy to be produced.
I have a Synology NAS at my parents place and I backup there every night with borg
The industry is surely changing, but “the industry” is mostly geared towards enterprise, because it’s where the money is. But the large amount of webpages are not enterprise pages but personal blogs, small businesses etc.
You don’t need a framework for either, but it makes working with both much easier!
Many older projects don’t get migrated to containerized infrastructure and smaller businesses don’t want the overhead it creates to run a single app/webpage. Plain LAMP with FTP access is still the most common way to host I think (and thus the cheapest if you consider the amount of work that would need to be invested to containerize).
Someone should do it in rust now