thejevans

joined 2 years ago
[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 2 points 4 weeks ago

Okay thanks I was very confused bc I had never seen that as advice anywhere haha

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 2 points 4 weeks ago (2 children)

recursiveMerge

Can you explain how you would use this here? Would this make files like this in my config unnecessary?

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

Its 4 EUR per 3 months or 11 EUR per year

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

with that being the case, correct me if I'm wrong, but your pitch is that users should trust your manually compiled and maintained commands to install things because you're guaranteeing that the binaries being installed by your commands are from official sources, and that is better (in at least some cases) than cached binaries from something like nixpkgs, where the trust we are asked to give is that the cache is built correctly from source.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago (3 children)

right, that's what nix does if you build from source

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 month ago (5 children)

Genuine question: Why would I use this as opposed to Nix? Between nixpkgs and the NUR, there are an insane amount of packages available, and you can build everything from source if you wish.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 month ago

yup! It used to be a part of CollegeHumor, but has since entirely replaced it such that "CollegeHumor" only exists on legal documents. Dimension20 is produced by Dropout, along with a ton of other improv-based shows. Game Changer is probably the most well-known after Dimension20.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

if the improv is the part that you really enjoy, anything on Dropout is worth checking out.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 7 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I use the floccus extension with Nextcloud as a backend for bookmarks/tabs and wallabag for read-it-later

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

This hugo theme works well: https://jamstackthemes.dev/theme/hugo-lynx/

for a non-self-hosted, but neat alternative: https://weird.one/

12
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by thejevans@lemmy.ml to c/homeassistant@lemmy.ml
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/6372946

A few friends asked for me to walk through how I set up the dashboard I have in my kitchen, so I figured I'd share it here, too. Here is a barebones walkthrough with config files.

 

A few friends asked for me to walk through how I set up the dashboard I have in my kitchen, so I figured I'd share it here, too. Here is a barebones walkthrough with config files.

 

I moved halfway across the US this summer. It's taken me a while to get my office/workshop put back together, but today I pretty much finished it.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/4506191

I've used sleek as my primary todo.txt UI for a while now, and I'm really happy with it. If you are interested in a simple, but useful way to put together a todo list in plaintext, the todo.txt spec is a great way to handle it, and sleek is by far the nicest GUI I've found.

About a week ago, I ran into a minor annoyance with an edge use-case that I have, and I wrote about it in the sleek github discussion page. Within 4 days, the maintainer of the project had a new build ready that fixed my issue. Nobody else said they needed it, but they took the time to add the feature I requested and now my workflow is that much easier.

I know not every project is like this, or can be like this, but there's no way that something like this would get added at anywhere near this pace in proprietary software. I, for one, am super grateful that software like this and the people that maintain it exist. Thank you.

Please check out sleek!

sleek is an open-source (FOSS) todo manager based on the todo.txt syntax. It's available for Windows, MacOS and Linux

 

I've used sleek as my primary todo.txt UI for a while now, and I'm really happy with it. If you are interested in a simple, but useful way to put together a todo list in plaintext, the todo.txt spec is a great way to handle it, and sleek is by far the nicest GUI I've found.

About a week ago, I ran into a minor annoyance with an edge use-case that I have, and I wrote about it in the sleek github discussion page. Within 4 days, the maintainer of the project had a new build ready that fixed my issue. Nobody else said they needed it, but they took the time to add the feature I requested and now my workflow is that much easier.

I know not every project is like this, or can be like this, but there's no way that something like this would get added at anywhere near this pace in proprietary software. I, for one, am super grateful that software like this and the people that maintain it exist. Thank you.

Please check out sleek!

sleek is an open-source (FOSS) todo manager based on the todo.txt syntax. It's available for Windows, MacOS and Linux

 

It looks like a lot of people want to self-host Lemmy. Would having an ActivityPub relay setup for those instances to subscribe to, instead of them all subscribing individually to the bigger instances be feasible? I've only seen discussions online about relays in regards to Mastodon. Has anyone attempted to set up one for use with Lemmy instances?

 
 
 
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