Thanks! Just added both, RSS at https://ccwatch.net/feed.xml and JSON Feed at https://ccwatch.net/feed.json. Wasn't sure whether to cap the number of items so I just went with all 230+ releases, full changelog content included. I hope that works well for you (and everyone else).
I would be interested, would even help testing and contribute but the next problem that arise if users had such easy way to deploy apps is, how do you handle backups, migration to new versions, single sign on, there are projects similar to this idea that already go very far, such as https://cloudron.io but they are "limited" in the amounts of apps they can provide with support and quality path for upgrades.
Inevitably, if I had all the apps I want to spin at hands, I would need a very neat way to make sure path to upgrades are smooth, don't break things already in place and potentially used in "production" by either friends of family..
it's a cool thing, but make it one time subscription, self-hosted, Docker, k8s, whatever else.. even a binary and I would pay for it, at least once. but I'm never going to deploy my blog on your stuff, that's for sure. also.. have you considered adding a few bricks of the indieweb.org / indiewebify etc..?
Not being able to back up app data to another device that I own because its encrypted with a hardware-tied key that I can't access is a terrible design that plagues modern mobile devices. It's my device; I should be able to access any data on it.
There are plenty of viable security models where the app data could be securely protected from Apple or Google by using a key that I own and can use on other devices.
That sort of feature is dangerous, and very likely to cause at least one vulnerability. If I were running signal, I would be very reluctant to, and careful in implementing it.
Anytime you use a device you need to trust the manufacturer itself is not malicious. The difference between storing and decrypting a database on an internet-connected Apple device and storing it in Apple’s iCloud is minuscule.
Then it doesn't respect the users enough to be considered free software. The user must be free to do whatever he wants, even sending a plaintext copy to Google.
I'm into byobu because it allows me to choose tmux or screen and I've gotten used to how it handles new "windows" in my terminal, I mostly use it server side, so I can have persistence and have each tab window in the remote terminal running exactly what I want, combined with fish shell it's just a pleasure to work
Simply the best VPN around, in terms of values, mindset, loyalty to their core beliefs and the relentless proof to stick to their moto over the last decades.
well... you just gave me a reason to rebuild my Bluesky extension from scratch, without a dependency from the original extension I used to get my base opengraph running. Bluesky OGraph Poster
I steered a friend towards Paperless (and away from an LLM solution) as a way of searching/accessing GBs of architectural PDFs recently - so far, it’s apparently working well for them.
I have been playing with it for a while but I miss a conversational interface where I can interrogate the PDF's and summarize them or let's say, find all the main events per year in a corpus of text and build a time-line of said events (context legal case with tons of text data to parse)
Hi @rmdes,
Sagar here from Joyspace AI. I recently made a Show HN post[0] around documents search engine.
We can do this very easily for you. We can provide Search output with context that you can further feed to an LLM for processing to extract events. Let me know if you are interested.
You can get in touch with me at sagar at joyspace dot ai.