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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)G
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1
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14
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • That's what I figured, it's already running without issue and converting the custom app to a standard docker would be trivial. Git sounds like a nice next step, right now my backup script just extracts the app configs from truenas and sticks them in a json file. It's good enough to recreate the apps, but if I mess something up I have to dive into backups to see what changed.

  • Yup, that's exactly why I'm iffy about tying my configuration too closely to a specific platform. Luckily my setup was still pretty small last year so the only significant thing was Jellyfin, which I just rebuilt from scratch.

    Paperless takes forever to start up, it seems to be something about setting permissions on all of its files.

    Do you have anything in place to track updates to your custom apps, or are you just leaving everything on the latest tag?

  • Forgejo has an option to mirror a repository and update on a regular interval. It won't get wikis or issues though. I've got mine set up to mirror a bunch of decomps.

  • I've been using the Jellyfin WebOS app, it works well but sometimes will transcode instead of direct streaming the first time something is played. Restarting a few times fixes it though. I also have jellyfin on my steam deck, but I don't think it does drm apps.

  • I switched away from truecharts once scale switched to native docker and my experience has been much smoother since. TC had some kind of breaking change every other month, now I only have to worry about breaking changes when the actual apps have a major update.

    The transition was way easier than i expected. First I set up nginx pointing to the TC load balancer for every url, so I could swap apps one at a time. Then I used heavyscript to mount the volumes for an app and rsynced them to a normal dir. With that I could spin up the community apps version or a custom docker config and swap over nginx once I confirmed it was working.

  • I use archivebox, it's a more general purpose website archiver but it runs yt-dlp against sites to grab videos.

  • A bit, but more sim racer steering and no boosting. Shoving other racers off the road or into obstacles is still viable and satisfying but it works a bit differently. In burnout any significant impact will wreck the car and force a respawn. Wreckfest cars can take a lot of abuse but damage accumulates until the car is undriveable and gets DNF'd.

  • Wreckfest

    This is my go to racer, the handling leans realistic but the damage model is very gamey in just the right way. It's a ton of fun dragging across the finish line in a car that's missing a wheel and most of its crumple zone.

  • Also possible they are putting stuff out early in the hope that public support protects them from the next admin

  • I don't reencode anything, I keep the raw bdmv rip and remuxed mkv for jellyfin. Even if the difference is imperceptible, as long as I have the storage space there's no reason to spend time fiddling with conversion when it can only make things look worse.

  • Brave is chromium based, which gives Google control over web standards.

  • And if attestations are rate limited then a grace period until they can get enough attempts in to be confident.

    If sites are expected to accept opted-out clients because they might just be randomly non-attested, why wouldn't the hackers and fraudsters just opt out of attestation?