Andres4NY

joined 3 years ago
[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 4 points 22 hours ago (1 children)

@tburkhol @rook Protip for Pi4B TV usage: if your TV has a USB port, you might be able to power the Pi from it. I turn the TV on and my 4B gets power from it, boots up, and starts Kodi (I'm using libreelec) automatically. When I turn the TV off, the TV hardware stays powered for like 5 mins before going into a low power mode which kills power to the Pi.

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 0 points 1 week ago (1 children)

@communism @Natanox I'd argue the client itself has a fair bit of jank, though. Like, the background bubble color around text is too dark, it makes it look really ugly and dated. Pinned messages in a channel, when displayed at the top, literally overwrite each other. You'll just have garbled/overlapping text.

Neochat looks much better out of the box (but neochat is also buggy w/ e2ee, dropping encryption keys randomly).

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 4 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

@tofu @Deceptichum I haven't had problem with concrete walls, but the walls with metal lathe (& plaster) really do a number on wifi and cell signal. I'm guessing different kinds of metal lathe probably makes a difference, too; my prior house literally had chicken wire in the ceilings, my current house has more like a metal sheet with smaller holes punched out.

@BlindFrog @Feathercrown Same. I buy broken ones of the same model off ebay and use them for parts when needed, because I don't want a newer vacuum with wifi. It *would* be nice to move off of NiMH batteries, but they're good enough for now.

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 6 points 1 month ago (2 children)

@Courantdair @eddyizm Two vowels and a consonant!

[I kid, I kid. Tempo development has slowed or stopped and has a number of outstanding annoying bugs. Tempus is a fork with more active development happening.]

@ArchEngel @Eirikr70 You can try it out by just downloading a client and registering an account on a free server. It's all here: https://xmpp.org/getting-started/.

Once you find a client you like and decide you want to stick with it, you can install a server you like. Prosody, snikket, and ejabberd are the most well-regarded (and snikket is just a fork of prosody that's designed to have a super easy setup; so realistically you're down to a choice between two).

@sobchak @bagel You can also buy industrial microsd cards that are a bit better than consumer grade ones. That's what I did after I managed to kill a consumer microsd card after about 6 months in a Pi 4b. The one I have (https://www.kingston.com/en/memory-cards/industrial-grade-microsd-uhs-i-u3) is rated for 1,920 TB written. That's better than, say, a 2TB WD SN850X (1,200 TBW), and faaaar better than typical consumer microsd (Sandisk High Endurance appears to be 117 TBW, for example).

@libre_warrior @thelocalhostinger The fact is that we consider selfhosting somehow "special", as opposed to "I'm just running this [ideally free & open] app that shares stuff with my friends", is part of the problem. Damn you, IPv4 and NAT! *shakes fist*

@corsicanguppy @sonofearth People concerned about this kind of thing could sponsor distributions to create native packages. For example, hire a debian developer to package and include immich in debian.

I've personally been meaning to package navidrome for debian for several years now, but other things have taken priority.

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 0 points 1 month ago (1 children)

@FreedomAdvocate @NewNewAugustEast You could just say "sorry, my bad," you know. It's pretty simple.

[–] Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 0 points 1 month ago (1 children)

@muusemuuse You can use navidrome in jukebox mode, and then play stuff either using navidrome's built-in web interface, or any number of subsonic clients. https://www.navidrome.org/docs/usage/jukebox/

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