ace

joined 2 years ago
[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 35 points 2 years ago (1 children)

If you're going to post release notes for random selfhostable projects on GitHub, could you at least add the GitHub About text for the project - or the synopsis from the readme - into the post.

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 2 points 2 years ago

I've been looking at the rewrite of Owncloud, but unfortunately I really do need either SMB or SFTP for one of the most critical storage mounts in my setup.
I don't particularly feel like giving Owncloud a win either, they've not been behaving in a particularly friendly manner for the community, and their track record with open core isn't particularly good, so I really don't want to end up with a decent product that then steadily mutilates itself to try and squeeze money out of me.

The Owncloud team actually had a stand at FOSDEM a couple of years back, right across from the Nextcloud team, and they really didn't give me much confidence in the project after chatting with them. I've since heard that they're apparently not going to be allowed to return again either, due to how poorly they handled it.

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 6 points 2 years ago (2 children)

I've been hoping to find a non-PHP alternative to Nextcloud for a while, but unfortunately I've yet to find one which supports my base requirements for the file storage.

Due to some quirks with my setup, my backing storage consists of a mix of local folders, S3 buckets, SMB/SFTP mounts (with user credential login), and even an external WebDav server.
Nextcloud does manage such a thing phenomenally, while all the alternatives I've tested (including a Radicale backed by rclone mounts) tend to fall completely to pieces as soon as more than one storage backend ends up getting involved, especially when some of said backends need to be accessed with user-specific credentials.

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 33 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Well, things like the fact that snap is supposed to be a distro-agnostic packaging method despite being only truly supported on Ubuntu is annoying. The fact that its locked to the Canonical store is annoying. The fact that it requires a system daemon to function is annoying.

My main gripes with it stem from my job though, since at the university where I work snap has been an absolute travesty;
It overflows the mount table on multi-user systems.
It slows down startup a ridiculous amount even if barely any snaps are installed.
It can't run user applications if your home drive is mounted over NFS with safe mount options.
It has no way to disable automatic updates during change critical times - like exams.

There's plenty more issues we've had with it, but those are the main ones that keep causing us issues.
Notably Flatpak doesn't have any of the listed issues, and it also supports both shared installations as well as internal repos, where we can put licensed or bulky software for courses - something which snap can't support due to the centralized store design.

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 1 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Ok, I'm loving the idea of a patch song. Haven't seen that before.

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 12 points 2 years ago

Especially if you - like Microsoft - consider "Unicode" to mean UTF-16 (or UCS-2) with a BOM.

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 16 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Do you have WebP support disabled in your browser?

(Wasn't aware my pict-rs was set to transcode to it, going to have to fix that)

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 85 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (5 children)

To be fair, having to interact with MS Teams with any part of your body is painful.

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 5 points 2 years ago

Considering it's still nowhere near finished, they likely want to keep the volume of feedback down, so the - likely small - team that works on the launcher has a chance to handle it all.

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 3 points 2 years ago

I'm currently sitting with an Aura 15 Gen 2, and I'm definitely happy with it.
I do wish they'd get their firmware onto LVFS, but that's about my main complaint.

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 14 points 2 years ago

Been using the KeyDB fork for ages anyway, mainly because it supports running in a multi-master / active-active setup, so it scales and clusters without the ridiculousness that is HA Redis.

[–] ace@lemmy.ananace.dev 25 points 2 years ago (5 children)

I think the only project I've seen so far where I've felt that a blockchain has actually been the correct choice is Alfis, which is a decentralized DNS that uses the blockchain as the public append-only ledger that it is, and it uses proof-of-work to add arbitrary costs to updates - to make spamming or namesquatting expensive.

view more: ‹ prev next ›