git LFS might be for you. If the data takes so long to reprocess I think it is fine to check it in (possibly using LFS).
git LFS might be for you. If the data takes so long to reprocess I think it is fine to check it in (possibly using LFS).
I used to do this, but imho the used language is hardly a useful index. When does it happen that you want to see everything written python? For me that’s never.
Also where do you put multi-language projects? Like, go backend with typescript frontend or whatever.
I push every project I work on right away to my gitea instance. If I expect not to work on something for some time I just delete the local copy.
When I change devices or hit file size limits, I’ll compress and send things to my NAS.
Well, that sounds inconvenient.
Damn right he owes us!! /s
How is being python-based a good thing?
Seems like a year ago he was actually using Linux himself. Wondering what happened that made him feel so butthurt.
Love how the top comment doesn’t even answer the question. But TIL, I guess. If I had known this option existed, I probably would have used it. I’m going to play the “not a native english speaker”-card on this one.
This is the correct way. I wish hetzner had a storage box size between the 1TB and 5TB version though.
ht o you men? You cn typ jut fine ith keybor like tht.
It’s also a good way to never actually getting the ball rolling on a new hobby, and instead obsessively research what the “correct” way of doing xyz is and then be too overwhelmed by all the opinions to actually get started yourself.
I think this somewhat depends on how tech savvy the people you want to give editing access are. If they know how to handle git and write markdown, I’d go with a git repository with (for example) mkdocs and setup CI/CD to automatically deploy to Github Pages. This would be free. If they are more like the typical MS Word andy, I’d go with a self hosted instance of bookstack. You could host it for example on fly. Unfortunately bookstack does not (yet) support sqlite so you’ll also need mariadb, which will make hosting it on fly slightly more expensive (but probably still far below $10), because you’ll need 2 machines in total. One of which you can’t scale to zero. There are probably other cloud providers where its going to be cheaper though.
My setup is simple:
My recommendation is: Keep it as simple as possible. In the past I created the craziest setups, but it turns out that in every day life I have neither the time nor motivation to maintain that shit.
[…] script something that does this.
Theoretically this pandoc one liner already does it, but depending on the website the layouting is going to be trash.
pandoc -i 'https://the-website-your-rss-items.link.to/' -f html -t epub -o out.epub
Might not be for you if you are not a TUI person, but I like newsboat. I also use it to watch youtube and listen to podcasts (with mpv). For pdf/epub export you can probably script something that does this.
Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yaos. I was expecting a nice fantasy story with dragons and shit. But the romance part of it was just so annoying. “Oh look that dude is so hot…” at every. single. occasion. I could’ve known beforehand that this book is more targeted towards female readers, but sometimes I just like to go to the book store and buy a book based on the blurb. Since then I made the new rule to keep my distance to books that mention TikTok or #BookTok on the cover.
Surprised to see jellyfin here tbh. The docker image needed literally zero configuration to work perfectly for me.
I know this is suppossed to be a good vibes post, but “nobody” is probably a slight underestimation.
Even with an ad blocker it’s insufferable though. Every time a page ask me to sign up for their stupid newsletter I want to punch a hole in my screen.
This + DeArrow. DeArrow replaces clickbaity titles and thumbnails with better titles submitted by the community. I wouldn’t ever use youtube without it again. With this setup I don’t even want to watch most videos anymore, which is a good thing, because let’s be real, youtube is a big waste of time.
That’s what I’m doing too. Kind of felt wrong to do that, but if you don’t need the extra features of docker volumes this is the way. It always puzzles me when I read “Volumes are easier to back up or migrate than bind mounts.” in the docs. How are these --volumes-from shenanigans easier than rsyncing some directory off the host?