I like the approach Pop OS takes. Their software store lets you choose between deb or flatpak when you install software. I’ve had issues with flatpak versions of some software, and flipping to the deb package usually fixes it.
I like the approach Pop OS takes. Their software store lets you choose between deb or flatpak when you install software. I’ve had issues with flatpak versions of some software, and flipping to the deb package usually fixes it.
I use a local text editor and push the git repository, which triggers automation to generate and publish the content. vscode is my editor for that work.
I run a static site using Hugo, Gitea, Gitea Runners, Cloud Front, and S3.
The experience is pretty good except for discoverability of new communities. My Subscribed and All feeds are the same. I started with the official local development docker-compose file and massaged it into place for my setup.
I run my own single user instance, and it was down as well. Not sure why someone would target a single user instance. Not ruling it out, but it seems unlikely.
Some flavor of Wireguard.
How does Paperwork compare to Paperless?
I just wanted to say I think it’s a really cool concept for a server.
Nextcloud News app.
Another solution might be setting up Syncthing on all your computers. It would present as a folder on the local systems and anything put in there would be synced to the other systems. No logins required.
When a project doesn’t publish a deb or other native package, or when the flatpak is much newer and has features you need.