@PropaGandalf
@lemmy.worldhttps://www.phoronix.com/news/Niri-0.1.1-Wayland-Compositor
https://www.phoronix.com/news/Niri-0.1-Wayland-Compositor
Hello everyone
Yes I know, a few months ago a post with the exact same title was shared in this community by @test626@lemmy.ml. But this was at a time when lemmy was still quite small. I would like to give the topic new momentum.
From their wiki:
ListenBrainz is a project by the MetaBrainz foundation which allows you to publicly store a record of all of the songs that you listen to. Using this data, we provide statistics, recommendations, and a platform for you and other developers to explore this data.
Many of you probably use a music streaming service. You share your user data with the company anyway, and some of it with others. If you feel like it, you can make your data available to the general public and help other open source apps to build their services on this data.
Website: https://listenbrainz.org/
Wiki: https://wiki.musicbrainz.org/Main_Page
Github: https://github.com/metabrainz/listenbrainz-server
ListenBrainz Android:
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/10542663
Well to be precise:
- How does one install it? On a hypervisor? On a regular distro + KVM?
- Should I go with Proxmox/Debian/some other distro?
- I already installed Flatcar Linux, is this also suitable?
Well to be precise?
Hello everyone,
I have been familiar with the ominous learning card software anki for a long time. Until now, I've always had a love-hate relationship with this program and have rarely used it. Now my life circumstances have changed and I am now more dependent on this software. And the more I immerse myself in it, the greater my disgust grows.
But I want to start on a positive note:
Sounds fantastic, doesn't it? Well, from my point of view there are some big problems. Here is how I see it:
Can someone help me to fix these problems in anki as good as possible? I know a lot is personal and also card/deck dependent but maybe I'm missing some obvious things?
Thanks in advance!
Hello everyone
Since the announcement of threads to join the fediverse and the resulting discussions I have been thinking about the matter of content distribution and filtering in the fedi. Here is a possible solution to it.
In essence, one can distinguish between server-based
and user-based
content filtering.
server-based content filtering
regulates which instances federate with each other and which content is cached on the own instance.user-based content filtering
regulates what content the end user sees.Content can also be categorized, for example, according to its origin. Sorted according to the quantity produced, there would be:
From this I then derive the following behaviour:
server based content filtering
should be used when servers want to prevent certain content from being cached or when they want to set up a small exclusive gated community with a few selected federated instances.user-based content filtering
should allow granular filtering of all the above content groups with the help of white and blacklists.
This could look something like this:instances | communities | users | |
---|---|---|---|
blacklisted | |||
whitelisted |
Each field could contain a drag and drop function or a field for importing a blocklist as well as a search function to find instances/communities/users. Instances could also define in advance which default settings an account created with them could come configured with. The instances defederated by the server could optionally be displayed with a checkbox, but then in a grayed out look to make it clear that they cannot be changed by the user.
What do you think?