FreshRSS runs on my server and I manage all my feeds there. I can read there in the browser as well. Capy connects to it and syncs everything down, and it also syncs read status back up. On the server I also have rsshub and rssbridge, which let you make feeds out of a huge bunch of sites that don’t natively have RSS.
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FreshRSS and CapyReader (synced to FreshRSS).
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
lockpicking@lemmy.ml•Lock Design Malpractice By SchlageEnglish
4·27 days agoHe mostly does pretty short videos, and tends to demo the tools he sells a lot. I don’t think its quite as bad as it sounds, and it’s probably as much just changing trends on YouTube as it is a shift to self promotion, but I do miss his older long videos.
At least the tools his company sells are legitimately very good.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
Wild Marketplace @sh.itjust.works•If it's not solid gold I'll be very disappointedEnglish
14·1 month agoThis is a popular hobby these days and the poles are expensive, this is a great deal for someone.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
openSUSE@lemmy.world•everytime I haven't updated OpenSUSE Tumbleweed for a while. it seems to forget my gpu.
1·2 months agoThere’s a zypper config file setting that will make it always auto agree. You can look at the suse nvidia drivers page for instructions.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
GameDeals@lemmy.world•[GOG] The Riftbreaker ($9.89 / 67% off)English
3·2 months agoTook them a long time to get working, but multiplayer is also really fun.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
homeassistant@lemmy.world•Do any locks prioritize access control, but not security?English
2·3 months agoWhy not just use a door sensor to tell when it’s opened?
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
homeassistant@lemmy.world•Do any locks prioritize access control, but not security?English
4·3 months agoAny smart lock should work on an interior door, you may have to drill a deadbolt but its the simplest solution. Switchbot and U-tec both make smart locks with fingerprints and excellent Home Assistant integration. Ubiquiti also sells magnetic latches you could install for access control if you’re in their ecosystem.
If you can give up on Home Assistant integration/smart features, however, there are oodles of push-button and even fingerprint door (without other connectivity features) knobs out there. Most of them are terrible quality and not secure but that doesn’t really matter to you and they are cheap.
Yeah but the problem is a LOT of common domestic door locks and padlocks are vulnerable to low skill attacks like raking or other simple bypasses that you can learn in a couple hours. The number of lock makers that cheap out and neglect even basic higher security features is shocking. Unless you really go out of your way and specifically go looking for a quality lock are you unlikely to find one with something like security pins and higher tolerances that resist picking.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Selfhosted office suite with good mobile apps/uxEnglish
4·3 months agoI like it a lot more UI wise. It feels like the modern MS Office if the ribbon UI wasn’t awful and busy. Compatibility is extremely good as well. Has Nextcloud/standalone web version, desktop versions, phone versions. I haven’t used the phone app that much, but it seems good from what I have used.
Edit: I don’t know how well it handles Markdown, however.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Selfhosted office suite with good mobile apps/uxEnglish
3·3 months agoOnlyOffice?
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
3DPrinting@lemmy.world•Prusa MINI+ has been around for years — upgrade it or buy something new?English
5·5 months agoWhat would dual Z axes on the mini achieve? The existing cantilever design is plenty stiff in my experience, I’m skeptical you’ll get any significant increase in print quality or speed, and I suspect at the cost of having to fiddle around a lot tuning settings to get it back to where it started as the existing firmware has a lot of tuning for the mechanical behavior of the exisiting design. So, if you’re not happy with the mini as is, I would be looking at a different printer rather than a dual Z mod.
Having myself indulged in the temptations of homebrew 3D printer mods, I came to realize that not all mods out there actually improve performance, especially this type of serious mechanical overhaul of what is already a fairly sophisticated and optimized design. A decent part of the mini’s secret sauce is in the firmware, and this is going to break that.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Self-Host Weekly #150: Watchtower No MoreEnglish
1·5 months agoTugtainer is pretty nice, and has a webui.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Why are my Insurance premiums go up more for just adding a spouse than they would if I added children.
2·6 months agoYep I pay an outrageous $1100/mo for my spouse and I. The coverage isn’t even that good. Looking to shop around this year because that big of a bite out of paycheck really hurts, but I suspect I’m not going to find any better.
Many of the common ones are considered automatically suspicious by a lot of sites, though not necessarily fully blocked. Especially cheaper ones. Expect lots of Cloudflare captchas.
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
Videos@lemmy.world•Using a Raspberry Pi to hide from my ISP
5·8 months agoNah, unfortunately I watched this video a couple weeks ago and while it is a waste of time, there is at least a bit more to it than that. DNS is part of it but it’s more “I built a regular router”. The backstory is the OP’s apartment has some kind of shady wireless ISP as their only option. They build a router to hide connecting multiple devices behind NAT (which they barely even talk about), but they don’t do much else to actually hide devices. Honestly it’s really basic and could be achieved with a cheap travel router, though the 3D printed enclosure they built is pretty cool.
Even if you’re not a Linux networking neckbeard and want to learn this video isn’t worth watching because it just glosses over the actual useful/interesting/complicated parts.
Previous 3 major release upgrades I’ve done were smooth, ymmv
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).
sandwichsaregood@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What webapps do you selfhost that aren't media/game servers?English
2·1 year 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.


Had a Tapwave Zodiac as a teenager. Was so excited waiting for it, quite a disappointment.