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Joined 2Y ago
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Cake day: Jun 12, 2023

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The fact that my video collection will mostly not play in browser just breaks the entire navigation environment of Jellyfin.


Yes, it is a cliche that “habits are hard to beak”, because they are things you’ve done so much that you are condition to do them automatically. Like, dictionary definition.


Yes, we need something like this. Like the equivalent to an opml file for rss readers, just with our community lists.

EDIT I just saw this, so it could offer one way to back up your subscribed communities list, in case you need to take it to a new instance: https://lemmy.ml/post/1870958


Couldn’t a person just make the decision not to follow anything from Threads, though?


I’m glad you’re liking it! It’s been years since I tried FeedMe. Maybe it’s time I gave it another look.


To be honest, I’ve tried a few apps, but I tend to just use it through Firefox. Here is a screenshot on Android, in Firefox, with the Theme Mapco By: Thomas Guesnon:


LOL! Thanks for the clarification! Great blast from the past, though.


I second Merlin! I did this for a few years before I got an actual NAS set up. It’s handy for simple network shares. The only caveat, is depending where you have the router located, heat can cause trouble. And also, since my router is an older model with less memory (AC-68U), sometimes it would freeze up if left running too many days with no reboot. That shouldn’t be an issue now, as they all have more memory. Just don’t stick your router inside a bookshelf where heat can gather, and you should be good to go. It will likely be lower speed than a lot of other NAS options, though, so it truly depends on your needs. But honestly, Asus-WRT-Merlin for the win. I used the SMB option, because you can browse right to it with no special software required from Windows, OSX, or Linux. There are even Android file explorers that can connect right to an SMB share (Solid Explorer rocks).


That was a great little mp3 app. It worked better on a low-resource, low-memory system than all the competition at the time (late 1990s). This is instead referring to the chat protocol that Google Talk ran on. It was formerly called Jabber.


FreshRSS already has web scraping abilities, and can grab the entire story for truncated feeds almost all of the time, if you add the css container class to the settings for the feed. What does Morss do beyond this?

EDIT After looking, it seems as if it does save the step of looking to see what the CSS class is. But I don’t like the fact that all my RSS feeds then go through and are dependent on one single third party. Seems to somewhat defeat the point of self hosting. I’ll just stick with FreshRSS alone.

EDIT AGAIN I see now that it is open source, but I still don’t see value beyond what FreshRSS can already do.