So Alpaca still gives functional answers if you turn off your internet connection?
Strit
Nextcloud might be overkill, but it does have all those features and more. It's literally made for organizations to keep track of contacts, documents, tasks, kanban like boards, notes and lots of other stuff.
In the end the creator of the game kindly send me links to AUR packages that other people had done for his other projects so I could see what they had done and I did and did the same, which was to put the files in the locations recommended by the specs like /etc and /usr, and to added a post-install message telling the user to copy/paste some commands to copy the files in $HOME. It’s a bit clunky but I guess it works 🥳
Curious, if it was the tui-mines and tui-sudoku packages you took inspiration from? If that's the case, then those are packages I maintain.
I chose to do some AUR packages, because I wanted to learn how to package for Arch, packaging guidelines and get a routine going.
I believe the reason to not mess with $HOME in packaging, is because of security. $HOME is the users private stash. To put stuff in there, from packaging, means you invade their private space and users should be able to decide what they want "dumped" in there. So just installing a package, should not put stuff in a users home folder.
They are not a company. Why would they want to "make a living" from it?
No, I sync my bookmars via Firefox Sync, so I haven't had the need for it.
Have you tried ESC
?
I tried Rcognize on my Nextcloud install, but appearently I have too few photos fot it to matter. It never started any clustering. Not even from the CLI commands. Had it running for about 6 months, then uninstalled it again as I was getting no real use from it.
IIRC it also pulls item information from relevant (open API) databases, so you get the synopsis etc filled in?
Looks like it. I added a movie to a collection and it pulled in data from TMDB.
For me starting a new account that also made it kind of overwhelming.
Well, you can use/link a mastodon account if you already have one. Not sure if it supports lemmy accounts.
Hm, didn't know of NeoDB. That's a nice find, I've been looking for a way to list my collection online, that I could in theory self-host.
Isn't that roughly what OpenWebUI does?
Don't most blog software provide rss feeds?
I know Ghost does, by just adding /rss to the link in question. So you can link to the whole blog, specific tags or even specific posts this way.