Yeah, I was looking at the most recent commit being two years ago. Hadn’t checked out the issues.
Yeah, I was looking at the most recent commit being two years ago. Hadn’t checked out the issues.
Possibly dead, but a cool project none the less.
Vaultwarden let’s you designate someone to take over your account if they request it and you don’t respond within a week
It might be cool, but it seems like it would be missing the context and documentation that would be present in it’s project repo.
maybe? Not sure if it lets you share without an account.
Not really. If that’s a hard requirement, check out what is supported by openwrt or freshtomato.
There was a similar question a few days ago with some points about wifi adapters vs access points brought up.
You’d probably be a lot better off buying a decent access point (unifi, mikrotik, Aruba instanton).
Meh, Supernote could shutdown tomorrow or upgrade to Android 16 and neither would change anything about how I use it. They also made the internals of this generation replaceable.
The Supernote is running a version of Android that let’s you sideload stuff, but I haven’t messed with it too much. There are also boox devices that are Android based and the inkpalm from Xiaomi.
For the most part though, I think the android versions they use are generally very old.
Pretty much all kindles have touch screens these days.
And the current generation of Supernote, Remarkable, etc e-ink tablets have reasonable response times.
I just wish I had something useful to add.
Used beancount with fava for a little while but it didn’t really stick.
You’re saying that Google has no automation or signature verification for what gets loaded onto their pushed update server?
There should be multiple layers of security preventing something like this and I’m interested in how those all failed for this to happen.
PHP is kind of a plus
That’s not something you hear very often.
It seems to have been built by a Google engineer “on their personal machine, not the proper buildsystem.”
How does that even get pushed out as an automatic update?
And perhaps make it a good habit to bind ports to 127.0.0.1 by default
I think you can also use expose instead of ports in the compose file to only make them available on the internal docker network.
I like having my downloads and current playlist separate, that seems like a personal preference. A widget would be nice; I guess I don’t use it enough for that to be a deal breaker. For a while it seemed like all the clients I tried had some weird quirk that made it kind of suck to use. Tempo was the first one that didn’t. I don’t think I ever tried Ultrasonic though. I’ll keep it in mind.
Tempo is my favorite Navidrome client at the moment.
That sounds less like a JF problem and more like a your files are janky problem.
I don’t use it, but it looks like yes.
Shotgunning box wine?