First it’s the ethernet in the air filter, and now this. I wonder what’s next lol
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Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
Linux@programming.dev•Tech Talk: How Electron went Wayland-native, and what it means for your apps | Electron
5·10 hours agoIt’'s neat to learn about CSD. That flat frameless window with a custom title bar look is what I dislike the most about electron applications. Hopefully those become less apparent with these new updates.
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Meerkat - a personal relationship and contact managerEnglish
6·17 hours agoOmg, this is embarrassing, I just realized my dyslexia strikes again. I read that as
portsand notexpose. That’s nice, I rarely ever see that being used. Thank you for the explanation.
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Meerkat - a personal relationship and contact managerEnglish
28·18 hours agoFirst, thank you for AI disclosure. Second, thank you for auto-filling the credentials for the demo. That small attention to detail is always a green-flag for me. I also had a great laugh at Rich’s timeline in the demo.
There was actually another CRM-like self-hosted software that I had written down to check out called Nametag, but the last time I looked at it, it didn’t have CardDav support, so I wonder how this would compare.
I am curious why you’ve exposed the backend port by default for the Docker Compose file. Is this for future external API access or just to ping the healthcheck thru something like Uptime Kuma? Why not just put both the frontend and backend in a network (I do already see the frontend having a
depends_ondependency? I guess my assumption would be if the frontend is down, so would the back.But this looks really neat, thank you for sharing! The next time I get some free-time I’ll spin up a little test instance for a deeper dive.
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Linkwarden v2.14 - open-source collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters (tons of new features!) 🚀English
7·2 days agoAnd I get it, I do, but I think what rubs me the wrong way is how cagey the dev is about AI disclosure.
Use it for your project, it’s open source (which allows me to see that AI is being used) and free to self-host. Like I mentioned previously, I do see the dev being pretty responsible about their usage from the few merge requests and individual commits I looked at.
Personally, I feel like FOSS is built on a foundation of trust, and I find it very hard to trust a dev/project that (in my opinion) lies by omission. So, while I won’t use/contribute/pay for this project, I’m not judging anyone who does and I wish y’all the best. At the end of the day, it’s your time, effort, money (if you donate and or pay for the hosted plan), and or hardware (if you choose to self-host).
Especially, after fiascos like Booklore (another project I now feel vindicated for writing off early) and the general trend of enshittification for almost all software and services, can you blame people for being a bit more skeptical?
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Linkwarden v2.14 - open-source collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters (tons of new features!) 🚀English
183·2 days agoI feel like I’m going crazy, because I distinctly remember checking out this project a couple of years ago (before they were called Linkwarden, and then when they renamed it) and noticing all the ai-looking commits (especially after the rename) in the repo so I wrote off the project. Also notice how OP doesn’t deny that they’re using it, just says he started the project before ChatGPT. I went through his profile and the AI profile picture and https://github.com/daniel31x13/gstack fork are pretty telling.
Let’s be honest, a lot of FOSS projects have been inundated with ai pull requests, and I looked at some that were merged. At least the dev looks like they’re being responsible about them. Look at the contributors for the last 6 months, claude is right there: https://github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden/commit/8bd3bd376316332693c5074a59dc3ab03559f1dc. Look at that contributor’s profile and website. For another one: https://github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden/pull/1553. Look at that user’s GitHub profile, look at the activity, look at his website. I’m not saying he’s not a good programmer or anything like that, but be for real, he’s absolutely using AI for his code, if not an ai agent of some sort.
I also find it hard to believe an app that features ai tagging wouldn’t also use ai. So it seems disingenuous to tag their Reddit post with “No AI” in r/selfhosted.
At the end of the day, I’m not personally invested, and they’re free to use ai in their project (it is a tool after all and can be used responsibly). But I’m really developing trust issues with how dodgy some projects are about disclosing their AI usage. Like just say you use it to debug, qa, brainstorm, or write your docs, and or that the outputs are actually reviewed by a person.
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•The surreal joy of having an overprovisioned homelab (2025) - from Anubis creatorEnglish
2·14 days agoYup, and originally I was also aiming to put together a full SSD NAS, so I wanted to use multiple 4TB sticks for that since it was reasonably priced (at the time) for the amount of storage and speed. Alas, now I’m just waiting to see if it’ll ever go back under $400, but I’m not holding my breath.
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•I don't always instantly buy merch, but when I do...
5·14 days agoLet us drink our Microslop hateraid and support a great channel/company at the same time. It’s just a bit of fun in these bleak times.
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•I don't always instantly buy merch, but when I do...
2·14 days agoI had a similar thought at first as well, but then I saw Tux. It also helps that it’s 100% cotton and would be good for loungewear since I’m also not a t-shirt with graphic type of person. The best part, for me at least, is that this purchase helps support Gamers Nexus.
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•The surreal joy of having an overprovisioned homelab (2025) - from Anubis creatorEnglish
22·14 days agoUse them as a form of currency at this point lol
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•The surreal joy of having an overprovisioned homelab (2025) - from Anubis creatorEnglish
8·14 days agoAnd here I thought $399 for a 4TB Samsung NVMe 990 Pro was a bit too expensive. Little did I know. I’m so glad my friend talked me into impulse purchasing it last year. What I’m more annoyed about is not picking up HDDs for my NAS last year, I refuse to pay NVMe prices for HDDs.
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•I don't always instantly buy merch, but when I do...
381·15 days agoNah, it’s legit. You can find the store link thru Gamers Nexus’s youtube channel if you don’t trust: https://www.youtube.com/@GamersNexus
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•I don't always instantly buy merch, but when I do...
25·15 days agoLol thank you (and tech jesus) for this, both my friend and I insta-ordered.
Breezy@sopuli.xyzto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.English
13·2 months agoI view that as a pro. Switching to Linux made it easy to quit that addiction lol.

Ah I think I might be misunderstanding then.
For this:
Am I misinterpreting that Electron on Wayland now supporting CSD for frameless windows would make it possible for developers currently using them to better mimic the look of Qt or Gtk apps (with shadows and rounded corners, etc.)?
I’m using KDE Plasma and Electron apps sometimes have that sharp-cornered, shadowless window vs the way Qt or Gtk apps are rendered. The most noticeable difference for me is the lack of outline, rounded corners, or shadow.
But do correct me if I’m wrong since I don’t know much about Electron development.