Just in the comments and if a user match a filter. You can tap and view.
Otherwise you have to go into the settings and edit your filters.
Just in the comments and if a user match a filter. You can tap and view.
Otherwise you have to go into the settings and edit your filters.
As suggested, Connect. Excellent filter capabilities. My feed is pretty enjoyable now, at least on my phone. The only thing I’m missing is filtering out comments with specific keywords but that isn’t a huge issue. I downvote and occasionally block a user if they just post an emoji or a pun.
I even have a “system”:
I only interact with content that I find interesting. Not a huge fan of defederation if it’s not pedo paradise or spam bot/troll farm. There are some good tutorials online on how to tie a noose if one of those two are your thing. Everyone has the right to an opinion and I have the right to ignore crazies.
Meanwhile in my Lemmy app…
(Blocked by an instance filter)
(Blocked by an instance filter)
(Blocked by an instance filter)
(Blocked by an instance filter)
(Blocked by an instance filter)
(Blocked by an instance filter)
Was looking for the same for ages. Every option I found was either some bloated docker solution or a dead project.
Gave up and just created a repo named “Todo” on my git server. It’s not really designed to be used for this kind of stuff but git and a web ui works perfectly fine. Just open a new issue. Give it a title and a brief description, a due date and some tags. Then you can create more subtasks, add comments to each, references etc. Even got my non-technical wife to use it.
With some customization you could probably get exactly what you want.
Edit: just realized you probably wanted something more simple. Set up a caldav server and sync the tasks using your preferred to-do app.
I also had similar issues on iOS when I migrated to Baikal. Every other device was working fine.
Double check that your certificates are valid. I don’t remember the exact details but Apple made a few changes somewhat recently in regards of what kind of certs are accepted on their devices.
If you’re using self signed certs you have to install them manually as well, don’t forget that.
But that’s not cool. Looks like you also can’t use your built-in system for managing the daemon/service and you have to install node.js.
Can’t deploy the latest micro service you found on github without some docker bullshit.
With that said. I’m not shitting on the project itself - it looks great and I’m sure it serves a purpose.
Ah, I see.
Perhaps sshfs could be an alternative. Not sure of the performance out of the box, but it is possible to tweak a bit.
NFS kinda sucks and I’m looking for alternative solution
Rsync + cron? If you just need to backup some files/directories.
Edit: ah, saw that you will read/write a lot. Do you really need to do that over the network? Why not upload a .tar, a snapshot or whatever of the changes?
If you could be a bit more specific then maybe we could give some better advice.
Use a seedbox if you’re downloading stuff and dont have enough disk space.
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https://linuxcontainers.org/lxc/manpages/man5/lxc.container.conf.5.html
Maybe this can point you in the right direction.
I’m not familiar with LXC - do you put together your container from scratch kinda like a FreeBSD jail?
For those who aren’t familiar with Swedish domestic politics: this is a good example of why you shouldn’t believe everything you read on the internet. The parent comment appears to be written in bad faith and borders disinformation.
The Sweden Democrats/Sverigedemokraterna, which the poster is referring to as nazis, have always been advocaters for a more strict migration policy. Apart from that they are pretty much aligned in the middle.
The actual nazi party (Nordiska Motståndsrörelsen) got 847 votes (0,01%) in the 2022 riksdag election and the poster knows this. Alternativ För Sverige/AfS, the closet nazis and where most people draw the actual line for the extreme right, got 16 646 votes (0,26%). Data from The Swedish Election Authority