

obsidian for everything and sync to all devices
obsidian for everything and sync to all devices
open source, can be self hosted or you can use the official instance.
Personally I have been using KDE connect most of the time when I am at home.
Pairdrop I use more when sharing with other people across the internet.
You can run a gui-less service that recieves and displays push notifications. I’ve programmed something like this before. I know it is technically a kind of client, but it is not an email-client.
Is the ‘%MARKDOWN’ part of your example correct? That should also be converted to a dash? Or did you forget the 20 there?
Source?
Edit:
found it. Welcome to the NHK
Sadly it’s a bot more complicated than just a docker container, but there is the manual install doc that goes into a bit more detail.
For anything deeper you’d have to read the script.
Personally I use Dokploy. It’s a dead simple docker web UI that makes domains and ssl easy peasy
I think I am limited by the software.
With a gigabit ethernet connection, I was not able to have a good experience.
Even when my internet doesn’t suck for a minute, I have yet to find a linux remote software that is not sluggish or ugly from compression artifacts, low res and inaccurate colors.
I tried my usual workflows and doing any graphic design or 3d work was impossible. But even stuff like coding or writing notes made me mistype A LOT, then backspace 3-5 times, since the visual feedback was delayed by at least half a second.
I run this somewhat. The question I asked myself was - do I R-E-A-L-L-Y need a clone of the root disk on two devices? And the answer was: no.
I have a desktop and a laptop.
Both run the same OS (with some package overlap, but not identical)
I use syncthing and a VPS syncthing server to sync some directories from the home folder. Downloads, project files, bashrc, .local/bin scripts and everything else that I would actually really need on both machines.
The syncthing VPS is always on, so I don’t need both computers on at the same time to sync the files. It also acts as an offsite backup this way, in case of a catasprophical destruction of both my computers.
(The trick with syncthing is to give the same directories the same ID on each machine before syncing. Otherwise it creates a second dir like “Downloads_2”.)
That setup is easy and gets me 95% there.
The 5% that is not synced are packages (which are sometimes only needed on one of the computers and not both) and system modifications (which I wouldn’t even want to sync, since a lot of those are hardware specific, like screen resolution and display layout).
The downsides:
I have to configure some settings twice. Like the printer that is used by both computers.
I have to install some packages twice. Like when I find a new tool and want it on both machines.
I have to run updates seperately on both systems so I have been thinking about also setting up a shared package cache somehow, but was ultimately too lazy to do it, I just run the update twice.
I find the downsides acceptable, the whole thing was a breeze to set up and it has been running like this for about a year now without any hiccups.
And as a bonus, I also sync some important document to my phone.
Here is a nice video that gives you an easy to grasp intuition about durations of different operations and access of components of a computer (Cache vs RAM vs SSD vs HDD etc.)
I find it illustrates well why a fester drive or even faster RAM (unless there is a different bottleneck) would give you a more noticable performance uplift than a different Kernel.
Sorry, it’s been a while since I did the install, what I meant is the default config of: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Zram#Using_zram-generator
I usually run the default arch zram config which is 50% of the RAM. For your case I’d go with 2 or 3 GB
Dokploy is a pretty easy web gui and is itself a docker container.
Makes it dead simple to manage multiple containers and domains. (Not for power users that need kubernetes level flexibility)
I guess you didn’t watch the anime. (Serial Experiments Lain)
In the story, some secret agency is running an experiment on her. Her family is fake, she gets custom, powerful hardware slipped to her by strangers, etc. So it is reasonable to assume that in that scenario that bedroom would actually be wired for that much electrical draw.
If you like TUI you might find this useful:
mr. robot
I didn’t know about mCaptcha. Thanks for sharing.
https://github.com/cea-hpc/sshproxy
Maybe? I saw a presentation from the dev, not sure if it will run on windows though