Oh right… thx for the hint. It’s indeed German, and I usually write it as machine or mashine, when writing in English. This time I was just unfocused 😅
Oh right… thx for the hint. It’s indeed German, and I usually write it as machine or mashine, when writing in English. This time I was just unfocused 😅
Exactly… but it still adds some overhead, which I’m honestly not a huge fan of.
At the end of the day, I want a single directory, where I can symlink the files and folders into their appropriate places, and share them across multiple machines, all that, without digging too deep into the tool, especially when I frequently update things, like a neovim config, etc…
And stow, paired with git, does exactly what I need. I only made some “aliases” to simplify the workflow.
I tried chezmoi, and wanted to love it… but I just can’t. IMHO, it’s complicated, which is why I built this one.
Unfortunately, wireguard does not run on low-end ARM devices like the yicamera
the thing is, the yi cameras used to work great for the past few years… sufficiently, for the price I paid them for - 13 bucks each.
This! I mean… what’s so special about their proprietary solution compared to what’s already known about a specific technology.
In case of camera devices, RTSP is RTSP… there’s no other magic or whatsoever behind it. You also can’t do any AI magic on these devices either. So any extra enhancements have to be done on the servers or apps.
Hence, they should be forced to give us full access to the basic stuff, and if they want to add some glitter on top of that and charge for it, by all means… they should go ahead… If someone wants and needs it, they’ll happily pay for it.
I’ve bought a bunch of Yi Home 1080s a few years back for cheap… I think it was 13 bucks each.
yeah… I know about yi-hack.
The thing is, I’ve installed some of them at my parents house.
Therefore, I’m writing a bash-script (should work for all cameras and devices) where the device opens up a reverse SSH tunnel to a public server, and let’s one access the cameras (RTSP) from frigate, even if they’re located elsewhere.
I bought them on amazon 5 years ago… My hopes for a refund are very low.
There is already OpenTheme, which you can install via the AdonManager… looks waaaay better than the default
We got GIMP 3 and FreeCAD 1 before we got GTA VI
would you mind giving some examples?
tbh… I like it more than OnShape, but I also just use it as a hobby for 3dprinting.
most of them are merged in FC, and they will still continue contributing.
There are already some communities with the same tooic, but without much interaction, so I was mainly refering to joining existing ones.
However, even if that happens, one can simply go ahead and create a new community with normal mod behavior.
That fragmentation annoyed me too at the beginning, until somenoe tokd me something along the lines.
“It’s like different reddit subs with each hsving their own mods and rules”…
So /c/gaming on instance A, and /c/gaming on instance B, would be like /r/gaming and /r/gamingfornoobs.
That is what I already do. But I feel like there isn’t much going on. Tbh, I’m more of a passive than active participant. Never been a “karma whore”.
I mostly scroll through the feed and chime into topics where I feel I can contribute to.
But wouldn’t advertising one instance backfire and lead to huge server loads on that instance?
Reddit took the time to get these communities going…
Sure! But, in this case Lemmy is literally a federated copypasta of Reddit, like Madtodon is of X.
Therefore, I think Lemmy is already a few steps ahead, due to the existing familiarity how communities/subs are supposed to be used.
So it’s not we’re starting from scratch… It’s just getting rid of the annoyances of Reddit.
Take Mastodon/BlueSky as an example. People are already familiar withbthe concept of how to use it.
Exactly. For now, it’s main focus is to only move configs to the dotsdir (since stow throws a conflict when there’s already something in place), let stow create the symlink and push it to git.
on a remote mashine, however, you still need to handle conflicts yourself. but it’s also mostly intended for fresh installations, or where you don’t mind just
rm -rf
the existing config