rutrum

joined 1 year ago
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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago (5 children)

Anyone ever done trade coffee? Is it worth it?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Im using nextcloud news and the associated app. I like it because it lets me play podcasts in a player built into the android app. I havent found an up to date rss reader for freshrss that does the same (read you is beautiful, but doesnt have this feature.) And I have nextcloud already up so its easy to start with.

Theres also many plugins for freshrss, including one for rss-bridge that turns urls into rss feeds. I use this for youtube subscriptions. You could also use rss bridge independently, which is what I use for nextcloud news.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

Yes. Oci-containers is similar to how you would setup a docker compose. Its not quite one to one. In particular, networks are odd, since you have to hand write a systemd service to create it? But thats only if you want isolated networks. You can find some examples on my github, I use it for most of my services. Heres an example of nocodb with backing postgres database. Its pretty simple: https://github.com/rutrum/dots/blob/master/hosts/modules/nocodb.nix let me know if you have questions in the future

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I have an 8bitdo, but I needed to learn how to use xboxdrv to get it working and map the buttons correct (nintendo style vs playstation). But now it works well. Unfortunately havent gotten the paddles to work at all with this method, but I hear that isnt possible if its connected as a generic usb device.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

10 GB of a database table sounds like a lot of records. Of course if this contained pictures or other media then this wouldnt be much. But I dont know for certain what data was leaked.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Okay this looks big as far as data, but is there any information here that isnt (wasnt) already public? This looks like profile information. Isnt all this already available?

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago

I would love similar movement with regards to doc comment standards. My company uses numpy and its too verbose, and the style guide makes zero mention of type hints so we keep winging it. And with not many tools for enforcing the standards (like what type to actual write for a parameter) its an ongoing battle among the team.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

Logicservers is what I use. Its good. The multicraft UI kind of blows though, its also an old version. But they provide the .minecraft folder over ftp so you get full control. A lot of minecraft hosting dont give you that control and they artificially limit you, like capping player counts. Logicservers prices things based on hardware, not "features" like player counts or modding capabilities.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

I really think the learning curve will be less than you think. Please consider at least reading the installation instructions. Here's the page for linuxserver.io's maintained plex docker container. I've linked to the usage section, where you can copy the compose file to deploy it. https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-plex?tab=readme-ov-file#usage

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 month ago (2 children)

If you use docker, it doesnt matter the distro. And to use docker, you dont really need to understand how/why it works. As long as you can take an example compose file and spin it up (docker compose up) it'll be less complicated in the long run than managing plex on the host machine (or most software for that matter, which is why containerization is so popular.)

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Whats the easiest way to contribute to the simplex communication network? When I run a relay node, how do I notify the network that my instance exists

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

Ive used easytag in the past.

 

Short video from Vimjoyer on how to setup a firefox install using home manager and flakes. In particular, the focus of this video was how to use an external flake as a source for firefox extensions, since they aren't available in nixpkgs.

 

I came across this article when wondering how to integrate the "building" aspect of nix (that is, not just a devshell) with static websites or other projects that involve some output that is not an executable.

This article also talks about adding inputs from GitHub that aren't necessarily flakes. I've used this myself to pull some example configurations for certain programs that I haven't felt like tinkering with myself yet.

 

I'm been wanting to move over my main desktop for almost a year now. But from 3+ years of tinkering, installing applications, and configurations Ive been super hesitant. The jump from Ubuntu to NixOS would be a big one. I have a laptop running nixos thats given me some exposure to the nix language, but when it comes to my main rig, I still have the worry of "what if something I need wont be available?" and "what if I forget something?"

Well I finally tried home manager and wow, its the absolute perfect way to slowly transition to nixos. I'm slowly going through my package managers (cargo, npm, pip, apt, snap) and checking for applications that I can just drop into my home.nix. And every now and then I see an app I cant install (say, vtracer from cargo, very cool app). Well, I just make a mark and eventually I'll build my own derivation around it.

Home manager has been easing my worries as I make the transition. For those of you also unsure, I recommend integrating with home manager. You can do such small jumps at a time, no need to go full blown nix all at once.

 

What apps do you recommend for people? Which apps did you start integrating into your day to day once you discovered they were there? Which apps solved a problem you faced?

 

What do you as a fail safe when there isnt a flake or nix package for what you need, and you don't have the time or ability to create it?

Here's my particular example. I need the beta version of OpenSCAD, which is only delivered as a flatpak in the beta flatpak channel, which I have tried but have been unsuccessful in doing. I havent even attempted building from source. Only the stable version is in nixpkgs. In this case, what would you do?

And in general, what do you do? Install things using a different package manager, like pip, npm, cargo, etc and manage at the user level? Do you run a VM? Docker? Let me know what your backup plan is on NixOS.

 

I've bought Pine64 products before (pinephone and recently the pinetime) but I've heard Zach Freedman (void star labs) mention this before and rave about it. I wanted to hear from the ergo community what they thought about it before I bought one to start my keyboard building journey.

In addition, if I should buy one, what tips do you recommend be purchased? It looks like I can buy long/short versions of fine/gross tips. What's best for keyboard building? Here's a link to their pinecil products.

 

My understanding is like this. For multi-user computers, you'd manage packages with home manager. If you're developing a project or need some kind of specific built tool or dependency, define in it in a flake.nix or shell.nix or build.nix in the project folder. And for single user computers, or maybe admin accounts install at NixOS configuration.

Whats the intent for each location? The current question Im asking myself is "why install home manager when Im on a single user instance and can just update configuration.nix?"

 

Hi there. There's a group on reddit that hasn't made it very clear about moving to Lemmy. I wanted to start a new community for r/ErgoMechKeyboards, and wanted to share here. I posted my own keyboard for the first time on this community. Cheers!

 

It is the Diverge TM 2. It was my first split or ortholinear keyboard. I've been growing tired of it, and inspired by other hand-built keyboards. I'm hoping to transition to a new keyboard and retire this soon.

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