[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 16 points 6 months ago

Sonarr dark mode! Finally I won't be blinded when I open it to try and fix a series at 1am.

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 6 points 8 months ago

I wouldn't say barebones, but you're right in there is no direct alternative to OneNote I have ever found. It remains the product I haven't been able to directly replace.

A lot of the products people will suggest are very feature rich, just not all the same features as OneNote. For me, the ability to draw on the page freestyle with a stylus is what I love about OneNote. So easy to annotate notes. But linking and plugins are things others have which I love that OneNote lacks.

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 6 points 8 months ago

Logseq has a "whiteboard" feature which is the closest I've seen.

OneNote has been the only tool Ive failed to find a close alternative to, which is a shame because I hate the new simplified versions of OneNote.

I will say though, the linking available on Obsidian and Logseq is fantastic for d&d notes and worth ditching OneNote anyway (for me it was at least).

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 31 points 8 months ago

Really disappointing to see this coming from the EU, I expected better from them

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 9 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

Check out Overseerr if you use Plex, or Jellyseerr if you use Jellyfin.

It will show you popular and upcoming movies/tv shows, and you can integrate with with the arr suite to have users able to request and download the shows.

It's fantastic, especially if you're sharing your media server with others

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 24 points 9 months ago

I used Libation. It's free, it's open source and it worked great for me

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 5 points 11 months ago

Nice, been using this service for a couple of years now and always thought the name was a little clunky.

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 5 points 11 months ago

Crowdsec will analyse the logs from your reverse proxy and identify malicious actors, bots and whatever else you configure it to. It then tells a "bouncer" (part of your reverse proxy) to reject the request, block the IP or redirect them to a captcha.

The downside is that it's kinda a pain to get set up, at least in my experience. It also stopped working without informing me and I've never been able to get it working again since. If you don't use docker the experience might be a bit easier.

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 5 points 1 year ago

I think it is on android still? In which case I recommend megladon. It's a fork of the official app with more features, like following hashtags.

I thought all the third party apps were really ugly, so I was happy to find out about this

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 7 points 1 year ago

I would have gone with an Intel CPU to make use of iGPU for transcoding and probably larger hard drives.

I also would have written down my MariaDB admin password... Whoops

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 5 points 1 year ago

Oh nice, I know the request has been made of Linuxserver as well but I haven't seen any official response to it

36

Has anyone managed to get Lemmy running using Unraid's docker configuration?

Ive always found the docker part of unraid very clunky for setting up instances outside of the community app plugin. Has anyone managed to get it to work? Did you run into any difficulties?

My current instance is set up on a VPS using the ansible script, but I'd love to move it over to my main server.

[-] das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz 15 points 1 year ago

There is a lot of debate on whether or not small instances help or make it worse, mostly due to how Lemmy handles pushing updates.

The main consensus is that joining a small to medium sized instance would have the smallest footprint on Lemmy.

That being said, Lemmy has a lot more developers working on it now it has all this attention and now they can see where Lemmy struggles on large instances, so what is true today may not be true in the future.

6
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by das@lemellem.dasonic.xyz to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

I've been exploring more of the Fediverse these last few months, Mastadon, Lemmy, PixelFed and found amazing communities.

I thought I would check PeerTube, the fediverse's answer to YouTube and it is... Bizarre. I used FediDB to check out the biggest instances, and as far as I can see, PeerTube seems to be mostly either a) French, or b) Gore.

Which leads me to my question, is there "normal" content on PeerTube, as in something you might find on YouTube? Who are your favourite creators? Have I approached PeerTube the wrong way?

Edit: Not to say that French is not normal, I'm just after English videos :)

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das

joined 1 year ago