I tried it and it didn’t work well for me (can’t remember why, it was awhile ago).
Also find me @ebits21@lemmy.world
I tried it and it didn’t work well for me (can’t remember why, it was awhile ago).
Looks great. I’ll probably wait for a flatpak and try it out.
I’ve already automated Restic with bash scripts and systemd timers but… used to use Vorta with Borg and did like having a GUI.
I do with Mobius and it’s usable. I have a Synology NAS always there at home to sync to though. (Mobius syncs 1-2 hours per day in the background but it’s dynamic and not predictable thanks to Apple).
If I didn’t syncing between iOS devices would probably not work very well.
Yes instant syncing with iOS requires you to open the app if you can’t wait. I’ll often open Mobius if I’m working back and forth to make sure it syncs instantly.
You could probably create a Tailscale vpn network (or something similar) and setup Syncthing to use the Tailscale address of your laptop.
Obsidian + Syncthing is what I’ve settled on. Not perfect, but the best I’ve used.
Already done… but now I feel like I need to switch to Neovim… and now I have to research Neovim plugins and configs….
Works great. Just remember syncing is not the same as a backup. Make sure you do backups!
The previous code was released under lgpl so…. Yeah if you can find a copy of it you are entitled to it. That was the developer’s choice.
Taking all the old code down with a force push to GitHub suddenly is a bit futile since obviously there are ways to get the old source.
I’m not against developers getting paid, but there’s definitely a ‘rug-pulling’ aspect to this situation that leaves a bad taste.
They claim that not enough people donated, hence the change in licensing. But yeah, I don’t see the business case. I imagine commercial devs will just move on to something else.
It’s just a wrapper for other GUI libraries.
That and I’m sure it’ll be forked.
The user has to have a key to use the software, no free account then no key after 30 days unless the developer paid for the key.
Jellyfin really is free :p
Also on Roku with a recent update
5 minutes after every computer boot to a NAS. Then nightly from the NAS to the cloud.
Wireguard is just much faster connection-wise. Built into the kernel too. Since it came out I haven’t gone back to openvpn.
Nothing wrong with openvpn otherwise. More config options.
Something like Tailscale makes wireguard setup dead easy.
It’s just so easy.
Headscale if you want to self host.
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I’m pretty technical… but I love my Synology.
It just works. Obvious choice for those that aren’t techy.
Interface is riddled with stuff that isn’t on my local network.
I just want something to manage the stuff on my local network!
Anyways… I now use Jellyfin a lot for the above reasons … until it doesn’t work lol.
I use an aeropress and Silverblue. Seem right?
:q!