

one
aka gkaklas@{lemm{ings.world,y.{zip,world,ee}},programming.dev}
aspe:keyoxide.org:CZQI42SE5HXWZCFPARIGCNK32A


one


SchildiChat + Element (Matrix)


Thank you very much! 🩵


I don’t think that there is a need for that 🤔
I haven’t used Addy so I don’t know specific details, but I guess you could forward the emails to addresses with a prefix, e.g.
addy-site1@domain.com
addy-site2@domain.com
You can then just use sieve filters to categorise them in the folders you’d like:
Inbox
Sent
Addy
- Site1
- Site2
The only reason I’ve been thinking that you would need a separate domain, is if you are self-hosting a service like Addy: if websites realize that your domain is used for “random” addresses, your main domain might end up in a blacklist as a spam precaution (whereas with a dedicated forwarding domain, only the forwarded emails would be at risk)


For people who have difficulty reading this (small screens, larger screens, screen readers, etc)
Hi @everyone!
Time for a pretty big update! Behind the scenes, we’ve been quietly cooking up something exciting, and we’re finally ready to share it: the Jellyseerr and Overseerr teams are merging into one team called Seerr! This has been in the works for quite some time, and we couldn’t be happier to officially join forces.
What does that mean for you? A single unified codebase where all the latest Jellyseerr features will make their way in, plus the combined effort means we can move faster on new features and keep things more up to date.
We’re sharing this news a little early because we need beta testers before our first release. If you’d like to help shape the future of this project (and move us towards a quicker first release), now’s your chance!
To test, you can switch from our official image to
fallenbagel/jellyseerr:preview-seerrWe do not recommend using this on a production instance, but if you do, please back up your data before switching. For any questions or feedback, please post in our #seerr-beta channel!
You could try sudo dua i /:
sudo: Without it, it might miss some filesdua: helps a lot with browsing directories and checking for their contents

I’m not a gemini user, but this seems like a nice tool!
I just came to share this blog post, written by the developer of curl about their opinion on gemini, for anyone interested :D
(PS: thank you for using codeberg instead of centralized alternatives!)


(They changed the name apparently)
https://l.opnxng.com/r/selfhosted/comments/14pdu0m/introducing_crackpipe_your_decentralized/
Embracing “alternatively obtained” games
we want to prevent others from profiting off our hard work by selling our software without our consent.


TIL; for people like me who just found out:
https://gamevau.lt/blog/2023/07/13
For a self-hosted app like GameVault, we believe it’s crucual to disclose the source code. We want you, our users, to have full transparency and control [?] over the software you use on your servers.
our desire to protect our code from unauthorized use and commercial exploitation. While we absolutely encourage you to copy, modify, and share our code for personal use […] we want to prevent others from profiting off our hard work by selling our software without our consent.
As a small business with just two members, we strive to provide you with a valuable product but cannot continue to do so as volunteers indefinitely.
(I’m a AGPL kind of guy, but) btw at least there are licenses specifically for software:
https://www.mongodb.com/licensing/server-side-public-license
Copyright and the CC-BY-NC license do not regulate mere use, such as executing a program.
Ok proprably we’re at least allowed to run it (That’s not a given, e.g. iirc if someone publishes their code on github without a license, it doesn’t mean that people can fully and legally use it, except for what some Github ToS clause defines that you agreed to)
I was interested in checking it out for personal use; anyone has any experience with alternatives? (I can look them up, I’m just curious about peoples’ recommendations)


For a simple links-only page I’m using Linkstack, and there’s also littlelink


I probably wouldn’t go with a relatively new project that isn’t guaranteed to stick around long-term
Oh of course, I just shared it because I don’t think I’ve seen anything similar and simple, just in case anyone wants to check it out and experiment etc


Oh also a friend of mine is developing this, that uses passwordless magic links or passkeys https://github.com/dzervas/magicentry I haven’t looked much into it though!


You can also check https://kanidm.com/ and https://goauthentik.io/ as well!


https://pine64.org/devices/pinetime/
The charging base is just breaking out the 5V of the USB to the pogo pins!


Reminder of this:
https://poolp.org/posts/2019-08-30/you-should-not-run-your-mail-server-because-mail-is-hard/
And that mailu.io (and other similar projects) makes self-hosting email almost trivial 😁 (at least for people that can run a pre-configured docker-compose.yml and buy their domain etc)
Not an alias, but expanding -h to --help has been very useful in cases where the program just prints “see --help for options” when you just use -h
I use glola from oh-my-zsh every day to see an overview of my projects
Ans ns/nss is very convenient to run one-off commands with software I don’t already have installed!
Oh and cdt = cd $(mktemp -d) is nice to have when you just need a temporary clean directory to do something quick
Yes, it’s pretty good! I’m a DevOps engineer, and have experience with Ansible, Docker, etc, but I just couldn’t find time to deploy services the best way that I wanted™ for my personal server
So, even though it e.g. doesn’t even use Docker, yunohost really helped me start using the many services I wanted/needed, which otherwise might take e.g. a few hours to a couple of days for each of them to research and configure
So I have one “production” yunohost server, one “testing” yunohost server to test services that I don’t know if I’ll use yet (and I wouldn’t want them to interfere with production e.g. by using too many resources)
and one server without yunohost for mailu, Docker, traefik, etc, which I can use to deploy services the correct way™ as I figure out the services that I really use and find the time to migrate them one-by-one
Even when using yunohost, there are so many things to do after deploying a service (e.g. DNS, configure the server and client software), so it has been really useful to save time when deploying and configuring.
I think it gets you ~80% there, makes self-hosting accessible to everyone, and helps democratize the Internet a bit 💚 It’s more important to have many people setting up e.g. Immich or Nextcloud for their family photos, than only a few Linux people being able to learn how to do it perfectly (Docker/kubernetes high availability, reverse proxies, etc) and have everyone else to need to resort to using centralized services
Ohh right, “τηγανίτες”! Thank youu, I haven’t heard it in a while 😅
(Thanks for the photos, yum! The red thingy also looks cute on them 😇)
In Greece the ones in your photos we call them crepes (“κρέπα”); for pancakes I don’t think we have a word, e.g. brunch places list them simply as “pancakes”, with the english writing
I always set it (mobile client, Thunder), because I find it pretty annoying when I see posts in my feed that I don’t understand (so it’s only fair that I don’t cause it to others)
Fortunately it hasn’t been much of an issue on Lemmy, but Mastodon is pretty much unusable for me partly for this reason (last time I tried to curate my feed, ~50% of the posts I saw were in languages I cannot understand – and I don’t follow language-specific topics or people)
It seems it has now been “solved”, with a popup for users posting from the website, reminding them to select a language: https://github.com/mastodon/mastodon/issues/25568 I think users (including me) will always make mistakes, and, as you note, not all clients support this setting, so I don’t think relying on the UX of everyone’s clients is a permanent solution 😕
In the meantime, the best I can do is set the tag manually when I’m posting 😔