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founded 5 years ago
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Translate You

Privacy focused translator app built with MD3.

Translation engines:

Features:

  • Translation from images
  • Translation history
  • Multilingual interface
  • Dark and light theme
  • Entirely Open Source
  • Material You(3) design
  • Written in Jetpack Compose
  • Support for Android sharing system

Project Page: GitHub.

Download: F-Droid, IzzyOnDroid, GitHub.

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/11659650.

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Hi there, simply looking for alternatives to Canva. I use this to make quick and easy presentations for Uni. But would like to find opensource alternatives. I am aware of the Libre and OpenOffice Suites ofc, but are there any other ones more similar to Canva?

Appreciate any suggestions.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Edit: For those who stumble across this with the same issue, I eventually got it working by adding “default-runtime”: “nvidia”, to /etc/docker/daemon.json then restarting the docker service and Jellyfin container.

I am in the process of setting up a new media server on an old PC using Ubuntu Server and CasaOS and have run into my first major roadblock.

To give some background, I formerly had my media server running on my main gaming PC on Windows using Plex and the *arr suite. I’m now trying to do things the right way and set everything back up from scratch on some spare hardware with Jellyfin and all the rest in dockerized containers. I chose CasaOS because I’m not overly familiar with Linux and thought that would be a good way to ease into things.

Everything was going well until I tried to get hardware acceleration enabled in Jellyfin. For the life of me I cannot seem to get the Nvidia drivers properly installed, much less give Jellyfin access to the device. I’m using a GTX 960.

I’m not sure exactly what additional info I need to give here, but here’s something I hope helps:

*****@home-server:/$ nvidia-smi
NVIDIA-SMI has failed because it couldn't communicate with the NVIDIA driver. Make sure that the latest NVIDIA driver is installed and running.
*****@home-server:/$ nvcc --version
nvcc: NVIDIA (R) Cuda compiler driver
Copyright (c) 2005-2021 NVIDIA Corporation
Built on Thu_Nov_18_09:45:30_PST_2021
Cuda compilation tools, release 11.5, V11.5.119
Build cuda_11.5.r11.5/compiler.30672275_0
*****@home-server:/$ ls /usr/src | grep nvidia
nvidia-srv-535.104.12
*****@home-server:/$ sudo dkms install -m nvidia -v srv-535.104.12
Error! Could not locate dkms.conf file.
File: /usr/src/nvidia-srv-535.104.12/dkms.conf does not exist.

If there’s anything important I’m leaving out - and I probably am - let me know. Also if there’s anywhere else you recommend I post this let me know that as well.

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“…where you start out as a respected genius and end up being a janitor who gets into fights.” — Bryne Hobart

[via @[email protected]]

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Bibliogram is being discontinued, and Barinsta doesn't work anymore too..

Is there some good soul providing an instagram frontend or app? I really need it to see events, but i don't want to get caught in those useless post suggestions and ads, i just wanna see the content i chose to see.

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So Recently I came across stirling-pdf through this community only and i was wondering if something like this but for images exist

https://www.iloveimg.com/

(i wanted to upload image but there is smth wrong which i would look later into )

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This is a complete reimagining of the Open Book Project, but the original mission remains:

As a society, we need an open source device for reading. Books are among the most important documents of our culture, yet the most popular and widespread devices we have for reading are closed objects, operating as small moving parts in a set of giant closed platforms whose owners' interests are not always aligned with readers'.

The Open Book aims to be a simple device that anyone can build for themselves. The Open Book should be comprehensible: the reader should be able to look at it and understand, at least in broad strokes, how it works. It should be extensible, so that a reader with different needs can write code and add accessories that make the book work for them. It should be global, supporting readers of books in all the languages of the world. Most of all, it should be open, so that anyone can take this design as a starting point and use it to build a better book.

Check out the promo video as well:
https://youtu.be/vFD9V8Hh7Yg

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Does anybody know of any free/OSS software for volunteer/distributed computing aside from [email protected]? I've tried setting up BOINC server side and man is it frustratingly complex even for somebody with sysadmin experience.

There's a lot of under-utilized hardware out there, and there's a lot of people who will donate their CPU cycles to scientific research or other volunteer computing projects, but complexity of the BOINC server-side software creates a very high barrier to entry to scientists.

I know that HTCCondor exists, but if I understand correctly, you need to be able to somewhat trust the hosts which do your compute. I'm also aware of various client software (folding@home etc) but I am looking for server-side software.

Ideal situation:

  • Can distribute workunits to clients on a variety of OS and hardware platforms. Obviously the server operator would need to make an app that can work cross-platform or make different versions of the app for each platform.
  • Can validate workunits either using its own simple validation or passing the workunit to a custom validation script you write
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In association with the release of curl 8.4.0, we publish a security advisory and all the details for CVE-2023-38545. This problem is the worst security problem found in curl in a long time. We set it to severity HIGH.

While the advisory contains all the necessary details. I figured I would use a few additional words and expand the explanations for anyone who cares to understand how this flaw works and how it happened.

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Insomnia, an API development/debugging/testing tool, has been thoroughly enshittified. It now requires a cloud account to use, even though most of the use is just sending requests from your local machine (to servers often running on localhost too).

Luckily it was OSS so we have a new fork without the cloud "features": Insomnium

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Video by Mental Outlaw

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

I wonder what tool they use to make these "age reports"

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I've used "qBittorrent Remote" from the Play Store but I'm trying to get off the Play Store, and use FOSS.

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Senior call button (lemmy.blahaj.zone)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Hi y'all,

I have an elderly lady living next door and she doesn't really seem to have anyone checking on her (I have never seen anyone coming to hers) apart from me and my partner every once in a while (usually she will pop by asking if we need anything and vice versa).

I'm a little bit paranoid about what would happen if she fell/collapsed in her apartment and couldn't call for help. It doesn't help that there is a dog living with her (I'm not gonna paint the picture, but I'm sure you heard the stories...).

I want to suggest to her to have some sort of SOS button that she could carry around the flat and, if something happens, she could press it to call for help.

I found this on aliexpress but it has it's own proprietary android app that I don't think would work on my GrapheneOS phone. Local, non-aliexpress options are pretty expensive and/or are subscription based.

Do you know of any alternative that wouldn't break a bank and would have more open source friendly system in place?

EDIT: I was thinking about a cheap wireless door bell (she would have the button - door bell would be in our flat). The problem is when we are away from home.

Perhaps a door bell with simple phone push notifications (my partner has a regular android phone so she could receive those)? Any product suggestions?

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