Skip Navigation

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/)W
Posts
8
Comments
627
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • I finally figured out how to get the terrain stuff going on my Wanderer. Super cool!

    Now I'm trying to figure out my future workflow... can you shed some light on it?

    Currently everything I upload is its own "Trail". This goes for the Strava integration, as well as me just uploading a GPS track.

    Trails are nice because they all show up on the Map, making a cool overview of everything I've done. Obviously over time this might bog down the system when viewing the map.

    Trails aren't included in the statistics, which is a bummer.

    So, I played around with moving each of my activities into broader "trails", based on where the activity took place. I think that's probably how Wanderer is supposed to be used, because when I move activities from being a "Trail" to being a "Summit", they are counted in the statistics.

    The only downside to that is they don't appear on the map, unless you click the specific Summit.

    So, basically, my question is -- should I just accept the fact that I should move everything into being a Summit, so I can enjoy the statistics?

    Thanks!

  • It's my understanding that Oak not being good for cutting boards is in reference to end-grain cutting boards. Oak is very porous and soaks up too many juices (not a problem for bread), but it only really soaks stuff up from the end grain.

    For an edge grain board like yours, Oak is a fine choice!

    The only benefits of end grain are that it's self healing after being sliced with a knife, and it's a bit more forgiving and won't dull the knife as much. Bamboo, which is very hard, can dull a knife for example.

    For a bread knife, these don't matter very much, so edge grain is 100% acceptable, and 1000x easier.

  • I try to avoid Amazon when possible. I've had this happen, too. I paid a couple extra dollars on eBay in order to avoid Amazon, and the item came from Amazon anyway.

  • I'm not here to tell them how to run their comm

    And yet here you are. I took a brief look at their sidebar rules and it's pretty clear that you broke one or two of their rules. I don't think that's a power trip. That's moderation. The Tankie Triad are also very heavily moderated.

  • Unbelievable levels of ingenuity.

  • Deleted

    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • The homepage just has recently added devices. Use the menu to browse by device type.

  • Deleted

    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • The Tasmota firmware documentation has a decent list, but it's limited to devices that are known to be flash-able so you can install custom firmware on them. https://templates.blakadder.com/

  • Are you thinking of Lemmy? OP had it on their Matrix chat server.

  • At least your stupid ISP has IPv6. Mine doesn't (yet).

  • Its working great. I'm not sure what went wrong with my HA installation version, but album covers weren't loading from Jellyfin.

  • Music Assistant is pretty great. My wife even uses it to play music over our Chromecast Audios. It sort of got borked up after the last update within Home Assistant, maybe because I hadn't migrated away from HACS? I don't know. Either way I just host it in Docker now and it still integrates with HA no problem.

  • I'm the one who files the most bug reports on github under a different name. Our instance runs on Lemmy Schedule, so thanks!

  • I used Portainer for a while and still like it for checking out networking stuff, but try out Dockge! It's more open sourcey and basic, but makes updating easier.

  • It's great. You can subscribe to all sorts of stuff including Lemmy communities if you want. You just have to be a little nerdy to get it set up.

    I used to use Google Feeds (I think that's what it was called?) until they shut it down. Then I switched to Feedly. I think both of those had some "discovery" functionality so normal people could just search for something and follow it. You have to find your own RSS feeds with FreshRSS but it's still great. I use Read You as an Android app.

  • Doh!