This looks delicious, and about my speed. Thank you for sharing!
This looks delicious, and about my speed. Thank you for sharing!
This looks amazing!
Not reallt cooking… But I like making hoshigaki (dried persimmon essentially)


There’s a google doc transcription of this series , so you mostly dont need to suffer through the voice, if you don’t want.


This looks awesome, and I’ll explore it a bit. I love this being open source, and it looks very clean.
I’m going to pull a prior post, because I think ALL could be potential improvements for your utility. Feedback mainly sensible for Kana, but it could be applied to kanji with significant effort.
I like these resources for practicing kana:
I would LOVE for it to detect when you commonly confuse two characters and then offer to give you a short drill of just those characters to reinforce.
OR if you could have a “good probability” of including easily confused characters in the multiple choice. Me/nu, wa/re/ne, chi/sa, can be easily confused. I havent done drills in a long while and I know roughly the shape I’m looking for, but would stuggle to differentiate some of these cases. With 3 multiple choice - odds are good I can guess whichever is present.
Opnsense on dedicated device, several built in filters + several github backed filters for unbounddns.
Haven’t tested it heavily, but the times I am on an outside network not using VPN into my network, or using TOR, etc, i am inundated with ads… So i guess successful internally.


There’s also logseq, which I would pit into this category, and is open source


I realize it’s just another framework. But I think the next time I’m building something useful beyond a basic CLI I will try textualize. https://github.com/Textualize/textual?tab=readme-ov-file
I don’t care much about aesthetic and a similar interface for terminal/web seems like it would be useful.
That said, I fully agree that it’s daunting to have to deal with any existing ui. It’s really tiresome to jump through multiple hoops just to get/show info - even before trying to make it pretty.


I always liked the concept of blaze, but it seems like development stopped 2 years ago.
https://github.com/blenderskool/blaze
Using webtorrents for multi-peer transfers & being able to UL/DL from a URL.
Me neither. Is it supposed to be a call of violence like “shorten the lives of the rich to today”? Or “shorten the lives of the rich by the end of today”?


I think it has some sort of binary already in the archive. There’s a “start-tor-browser.desktop” you just double click to launch the browser.


I dont have a library that big, but I would recommend trying the Feishin desktop player if using navidrome. It’s a solid player in my experience, and has a smart playlist creator UI which the navidrome webui does not include.
This; Linuxserver Qbittorrent docker with gluetun to make sure all traffic goes through your VPN.


I believe grayjay has a desktop app now. I think it may still be in testing, though.


Semi-related, but several years ago I had a good experience getting my audiobooks from audible with https://github.com/rmcrackan/Libation


Not positivr, but the FAQ says its a delta chat client, and delta chat indicates you could host your own chatmail - so, hopefully.


Most listed in some form elsewhere, but
I’ve also been enjoying Kate. It’s a decent text editor, but the ability to Ctrl + / to pipe selected lines through any Linux command (Uniq, shuf, etc) is a bit of a superpower for an editor


I love flexibility with regex, personally I use ugrep as it also allows utilization of boolean and/or/not logic for more complicated searches.


Do you have experience with either ranger, lf, or yazi? I’m wondering how broot compares. Big fan of file ranger, and this looks very similar.
I think its budgeting features are lackluster, but I have highly enjoyed gnucash for tracking my expenses, incime & where everything goes.
It’s all manual more or less, and you do double ledger accounting, so all the money is accounted for somewhere.