I tried both MQTT and just the plain HTTP variant, and I couldn’t get either to work. I’ve fully settled on the latter you mentioned, Traccar. it’s pretty much what I’ve wanted: self-hosted, easy to set up, beautiful web interface. Thanks for the suggestions!
for two reasons, I can’t use this.
OwnTracks setup was a bit confusing to me and I never got it working. traccar looks pretty nice though, I’ll check it out!
oh my fuck. circular imports.
I set out to create a Discord Bot in Python, then gave up trying to use an easy “proper” server-side language and just did it in TypeScript
I didn’t know cobalt.tools was OSS. cool!
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Mint is lovely! I started out with it years ago and still use it today.
FOSS developers should be paid.
On Librewolf the default is all cookies get cleared. When you go to a site you want to save cookies for, you can easily add it to the whitelist by clicking the lock icon in the URL bar and toggling on the “Keep cookies” option.
Ah, I didn’t see that, it hadn’t been updated on the IzzyOnDroid repo. I’ll update to it now and try out Voyager again!
Interesting! I see that it does have link handling now, although I still don’t see it appearing in Lemmy Redirect for me.
I liked Voyager but it didn’t have any link handling last time I used it, not even with Lemmy Redirect, so I just stuck with Thunder.
Just like we drew it up.
usually in your router settings you can change local DNS settings. you can set your domains and subdomains to point to your server’s local IP.
Symfonium. Don’t get me wrong, I like Finamp, but it just does not come close to the amount of features that Symfonium has.
I’ve set up Vaultwarden as I used Bitwarden before that and it made switching very easy. Doesn’t get easier than that, synced passwords across all your devices/browsers.
then remove that “colossal attack surface” by compiling a custom kernel and utilities that only includes the features the product needs. create a system tuned to the exact product to make it extremely reliable. almost everything electronic you see in commercial use is Linux because of this very fact.
Many medical devices run Linux.
Toyota, Tesla, Audi, Mercedes, and Hyundai vehicles use Linux.
you certainly can rely on it for your life and nearly every electronic device you use will use some derivative of it.
this. after i set different zsh themes on my servers + my main machine i now know exactly what machine i’m running commands to
I mostly use Shizuku + Termux to run adb commands on device, but this looks easier and nicer