DetachablePianist

joined 1 year ago
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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

I'm a huge fan of Ubiquiti APs, and run their Unifi controller on a Raspberry Pi. Sadly, their code is proprietary - but it basically just works.

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

Maybe see if 'rclone mount' solves the problem for ya. Rclone can often be a super handy swiss army knife for stuff like this.

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

Pair it with one of those toilet seat iBooks from the 90s and you've really got something!

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Oh, Brother.

No seriously, buy Brother printers instead and avoid (at least some of) this enshitification.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

Classic 8 bit NES. Save state and upscaling are all great features everyone appreciates, but what I really hated was Nintendo's hard, square controller! Using a modern, soft rounded controller to replay my classic NES favs is just so much better. And yeah, save game state is a literal game changer, lol.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 month ago (2 children)

This exactly. We need to pass ranked choice voting before any third party candidtaes (from either side of the political spectrum) will ever have a chance. Until then, our top priority is keeping the fascist extremists from seizing control, or we may lose our "right" to vote entirely.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago

Good choices. I too run Librewolf by default, with ungoogled Chromium standing by for the occassional asshat website intentionally designed to work exclusively on Chrome

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

in my opinion, yes.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 months ago (2 children)

I run real-time full band rehearsals with jamulus.io for low latency audio, plus any video tool of your choice (with the audio muted). we use muted Jitsi Meet for the video feed, but it really doesn't matter. it's all about the Jamulus audio

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

"Welcome to Rivendale, Mr. Anderson."

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

Take a look at xbrowsersync.org

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 months ago

Safeway. That's only one of the several good reasons why I don't shop there.

 

Sorry if this is a newb question; I'm coming in cold. I've had HAOS running on an RPi4 for months, but I haven't invested in any smart devices to connect yet.

I'd like to start with some (ideally open source) smart gauges just to check the temp out front and back. Any recommendations?

Thanks!

 

One site I've been following for awhile is https://notifycyber.com/

...but I'd love some more. What are your must-haves?

 

I'd love to get some convo going in here. Happy to help if anyone has any Jamulus questions...

 

I purchased a Pixel 7 for my wife specifically to install Lineage OS 21, replacing a Samsung Galaxy which hasn't received updates for years. She hates changing phones, but I sold her on a Pixel + Lineage so she can keep the phone as long as possible, still receiving OS updates.

I'm super happy with the outcome, finding Lineage to be a huge win. However, my wife is extremely particular about customizing her interface, and finds Lineage (or maybe it's just the newer Android 14?) lacking the customization options she wants. She's coming from a much older Android version, possibly relying on a few Samsung-specific options.

In particular, Lineage's Trebuchet launcher doesn't seem to let her group apps as folders in the app drawer (tray?) - only on the primary Home screen. When she swipes up, she gets an overload of apps all at once, and she wants to group those into folders the same way the Home screen allows. The Home screen itself she prefers to keep super clean. The config she likes was easy to setup her older Samsung running vendor-ROM Android, and she's super frustrated that she can't seem to get that under Lineage.

Also, she absolutely hates the default app icons and font choices. I'm hoping to get a recommendation for a replacement Launcher, and/or add-on apps that allow her to customize these specific settings. F-Droid apps would be ideal, though paid GApps (ugh!) would still do in a pinch. I just want her to love her new phone, and without these options she never will.

Thanks so much!

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submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I just inherited a handful of Samsung Series 7 Slate PCs that I'd like to rebuild to be as "tablet-like" as possible for a few non-technical friends and family. They power up but arrived with non-functional Windows 7 installs. They're Intel Core i5s with 4G RAM and 128G SSDs, so they should run pretty well under any popular Linux distro. I'm personally comfortable in the command line and don't want to sacrifice the fact that these are "real computers with a real OS" on them, but I'd still like them to behave somewhat similar to Android tablets for less techie users.

If these were laptops with keyboards and trackpads I'd probably just install kubuntu or Mint on them and call it a day, but I'm not sure if KDE Plasma behaves well on a touchscreen tablet interface with (hopefully) an on-screen keyboard and so forth. Ubuntu Touch sounds somewhat promising, but I haven't really played with it. I don't want to waste hours trying to get device drivers to work for the touchscreen and other built-in hardware, so I'm hoping for a novice-friendly distro that usually just works out of the box on most hardware.

Does anyone have an obvious choice they'd like to recommend? Thanks so much!

Edit - Update:

Zorin OS (Edu) for the win, with Pop! OS essentially a tie. Both distros do a fantastic job out of the box offering tablet options like on screen keyboards that automatically pop up when needed. I'm giving Zorin the win only because it just happened to be the last distro I installed and haven't had a reason to replace it yet.

Distros I tested for use on these tablets:

Bliss OS - Honestly, I really wanted to like this, in spite of it being an Android clone instead of a proper Linux DE. It sports an obviously tablet-friendly UI that almost won me over... except there were horrible issues just typing in basic settings like wifi password. The keyboard kept disappearing mid-password, making me start over repeatedly. I finally had to grab a real keyboard to join wifi, and it still misbehaved. Not an experience I want my less geeky family members to share.

kubuntu - I run this on a personal laptop and was biased toward it from the start. It isn't really a great tablet experience though, even with xvkbd installed. Works great while docked of course, since it's a Linux DE I already use.

ubuntu-unity - Another good DE, but just not very tablet friendly. I guess I hoped this would be more like Ubuntu Touch, which I was really excited about as a new phone possibility awhile ago, but just never really went anywhere. Instead it's just Ubuntu with the Unity DE and no automatic on-screen kb.

Pop! OS - I really like this, and might start playing with it more as a laptop OS as well. I truly love KDE Plasma, but I also find Pop!'s DE really intuitive.

Zorin OS (Edu) Loved this, left it installed. Their built-in Windows App compatibility (wine + PlayOnLinux) comes pre-configured to provide a surprisingly refreshing user experience. On a fluke, I wanted to see if I could run my mixer app on the tablet, and starting with nothing more than downloading the installer .exe file from Mackie's website, Zorin prompted me all the way through to a working app. Friendliest wine experience I've ever had, by miles.

Anyone have anything else they'd like to recommend? I'm always interested. Did I not give a popular distro a fair enough shot? I admittedly didn't invest a huge amount of time stress-testing each distro beyond initial setup and config from within the tablet-specific interface. I was mainly testing for out-of-box tablet experience, especially in regards to basic setup like joining wifi and attempting to browse the web, which shouldn't require a hard kb connected IMO.

Edit 2: Fixed copy/paste edit issue, no new info)

 

(crossposted from c/Cloudflare on lemmy.ml) The Cloudflare community doesn't appear to be active yet, so I was hoping some fellow self-hosters might have a good suggestion. Thanks in advance for any and all suggestions!

https://lemmy.ml/post/3723540

 

I'm trying to secure a WebDAV server behind Cloudflare using Google OAuth. This works great in a web browser, but I need our users to natively mount the WebDAV share to their local Mac/Windows/Linux desktops as a mounted network volume, and I haven't figured out a way to accomplish this.

I'm hoping there might be some way to first require authentication in a browser window, store that authenticated user's IP address "somewhere on Cloudflare", then continue to allow https access from their IP through other connection means, including a secondary browser that hasn't also been explicitly authenticated, or more to the point - a native OS mount request of the https volume. The origin server also requires it's own Digest authentication, so once I've verified a particular IP address is a valid user, I'm willing to allow them to direct-authenticate to the server.

Anyone have any thoughts on how do this? If not possible through Cloudflare, I'll gladly take an alternate solution that enables 2FA for the native OS mount mechanism. It just has to be cross platform, and allow a proper network volume mounted to the user's desktop. Google OAuth is preferred, but any 2FA solution from the desktop (not a browser) will do the trick.

Thanks in advance!

 

wefwef saya there are no posts here?

 

Jamulus effing rocks. I have spoken.

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