If your purpose is long term archival you should probably be using M-Disc Blu-rays anyway, which are still actively made by Verbatim (and one other company).
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sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What webapps do you selfhost that aren't media/game servers?English2·4 months agoNot entirely sure about the de-google’d version of the Home Assistant companion app, but I know the regular companion app uses Firebase (and whatever the Apple equivalent is called, I forget) to deliver notifications, and it still would using Telegram as Telegram also uses Firebase. Apprise is a bit different as it can use multiple backends. Regardless, there are multiple ways to do things. Ntfy iphone and google app do not route your data through a third party server. I self host the ntfy server on my own machine and domain and my phone connects to it and receives data. It will deliver notifications wherever I am, not just in my LAN. It also provides a nice UI akin to Pushbullet I can use to send myself stuff privately.
You can’t replicate all of what ntfy does with Home Assistant. There’s more to it than just delivering notifications, it’s the whole app frontend and persistent data etc. If it’s not clear to you what it’s for from my description you might have to go look into it yourself. Look at PushBullet, that’s most similar to what I primarily use it for.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What webapps do you selfhost that aren't media/game servers?English1·4 months agoHome Assistant notifications and almost all other notification services on phones actually route notifications through a cloud service like Firebase because Apple and Google try to railroad apps into their platforms. Ntfy lets you actually self host notifications without a third party, but also without killing your battery.
That’s not the main thing I care about, though. Mainly I use it as a self hosted replacement for PushBullet, to share links and files with myself across machines and do some light alerting for servers and stuff (e.g. TrueNAS errors). Some of that could he done with HA, but ntfy is just better for some other uses with stuff like its web ui.
Plus, apart from that ntfy is really easy to integrate with other stuff, like its easy to send a notification from a shell script or web hook so you can hack it into things that don’t otherwise support notifications (there are also lots of things that support ntfy natively, e.g. the arrs).
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What webapps do you selfhost that aren't media/game servers?English5·4 months agoActually Budget for finances, Nextcloud for everything office and organization, Home Assistant for home automation, paperless–ngx for storing and sorting documents, freshrss for news, ntfy.sh for notifications.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Could wastewater plants simply heat up water past 500C to decompose all chemicals and output clean water?4·4 months agoArtificial elemental transmutation of lead into other elements is not just fantasy, it’s entirely possible and happens in particle accelerators and nuclear reactors. It’s just extremely impractical as it’s an extremely slow process at anywhere near the particle fluxes we can practically achieve. Plutonium is made through a similar process (though the exact mechanism used to produce plutonium is relatively more efficient) as well as small quantities of useful radioisotopes, but it is also possible with lead.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto DeGoogle Yourself@lemmy.ml•Photos alternative with good recognition / search?7·4 months agoOnly a sample size of one here, but I’ve used it for quite a while now and it’s definitely one of the more stable and reliable apps I self host. It’s a delight.
Assuming you mean Android, FYI syncthing for android is discontinued, so you might want to look into other options.
https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing-android?tab=readme-ov-file#discontinued
I don’t think immich supports this natively but you could mount an S3 store with s3fs-fuse and put the library on there without much trouble. Or many other options like webdav.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Which reverse proxy do you use/recommend?English1·6 months agoI really like Zoraxy. Similar to NPM but it’s its own thing and I like it a lot more
I know how to use raw nginx/Caddy/traefik to do it, but I find the WebUI and all the extra features Zoraxy has to be very convenient and easy to use.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Fediverse@lemmy.world•Is your internet speed rigged? They want us consuming, not participating!English1·7 months agodeleted by creator
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How do I use public URLs but route within my home network?English2·8 months agoImpossible to say, could be the app is doing something funky, could be iOS, could be lotta things.
I will note, my preferred solution is to do none of the above, and I only do split DNS for one particular service. I much prefer just using an always on Wireguard VPN that is set to only route traffic to my internal subnets and to use my internal DNS server. Then I just use internal names. Wireguard basically runs at line rate on my setup, so half the time I don’t even turn it off at home. This also gives you the option to use DNS ad blocking (eg adguard) on the go.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How do I use public URLs but route within my home network?English4·8 months agoHmm, caching has never caused problems with split DNS for me, but it’s really hard to debug what was going on with your setup. Split DNS is really common and is the preferred way to solve this, so most browsers have logic to handle it. You might have had something misconfigured, but unfortunately it’s really hard to diagnose.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How do I use public URLs but route within my home network?English11·8 months agoAKA, split DNS. Doing it this way is a bit cleaner than hairpin NAT as mentioned in other comments, but both options work fine in a home network.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Whoogle: How can I use the preferences URL?English4·10 months agoThe message you’re reading applies to the checkbox above for encryption, not the preferences url. The preferences key only needs to be set if you want to encrypt the configuration URL, it doesn’t affect what OP wants to do.
My memory is a bit fuzzy because I switched to Searxng after playing with Whoogle briefly, but I thought Whoogle stored preferences in a cookie or something similar; the preferences URL is for when you want to transfer the preferences for your current machine to another. So OP is misunderstanding what it’s for.
OP: if your preferences aren’t sticking, are you maybe blocking cookies entirely or something? I’m pretty sure you shouldn’t need to do anything with the preferences URL for your preferences to stick if everything is set up correctly, it’s only for transferring your preferences to another machine.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Open Source@lemmy.ml•SpMp is one of the prettiest open source android app I've seen. It's a complete free youtube music client2·10 months agoI don’t have a problem with it playing a song way out of nowhere, but what if does do is play the same like 20 songs over and over and over when I let it try to recommend things. Like the songs it picks are decent recommendations but damn could I have something different?
And while we’re venting, its recommended album feed for me is surprisingly good, except that half the things it recommends are singles releases. I don’t want to see those please let me just se albums…
At least they fixed the bug where “repeat album” would constantly turn itself on.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•if you looking for a good alternative for google search, try "SearXNG"2·10 months agoIt’s not useless, it removes a lot of the tracking cookies and such and sponsored links loaded with telemetry. Theoretically you can also get the benefits of anonymity if you proxy through Tor or a VPN, which I originally tried to do but turns out Google at least blocks requests from Tor and at least the VPN endpoint I have and probably most of them. Google or whatever upstream SE can still track you by IP when you self host, but its tracking is going to much less without the extra telemetry cookies and tracking code it gets when you use Google results directly.
But yes, practically you either have to trust the instance you’re using to some extent or give up some of the anonymity. I opted to self host and would recommend the same over using a public instance if you can, personally. And if privacy is your biggest concern, only use upstream search providers that are (or rather, claim to be) more privacy respecting like DDG or Qwant. My main use case is primarily as a better frontend to search without junk sponsored results and privacy is more of a secondary benefit.
FWIW, they have a pretty detailed discussion on why they recommend self-hosting here.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•if you looking for a good alternative for google search, try "SearXNG"10·10 months agoI’ve always gotten the impression it was mostly intended to be self hosted. I’ve self hosted it for something like a couple years now, runs like a clock. It still strips out tracking and advertising, even if you don’t get the crowd anonymity of a public instance.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Store (and access) old emailsEnglish11·10 months agoNo, I used it with Alot mostly in the terminal. Can’t really speak to the front ends, I was kind of assuming you don’t need to search your old emails that often.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Store (and access) old emailsEnglish6·10 months agoAs another poster pointed out, it sounds like you want more of a mail search and archival tool than a mail server. I would suggest you pull the emails in maildir format from Google Takeout, and then index/search them with the amazing Notmuch. Notmuch is way more capable than Gmail search ever has been. Look at the Arch Wiki page page as well for info, the official docs are a bit obtuse but it’s not actually hard to use.
Previous 3 major release upgrades I’ve done were smooth, ymmv