Use Navidrome for music and transcode mp3 streaming. Done and dusted.
That's a different problem than access to music which I'll leave up to you. But I'll note that music exists out of the sphere of corporate dominance. And by that I mean, artists that self publish.
I find it interesting how quickly one abandons the principle struggle central to the meme on this post. Like, "I use Linux and don't give corporations a dime but I LOVE Jay-z"
Until you tell us what your budget is, I'm not sure there's much to discuss. You're talking about motherboards. So I guess your choice right now comes down to Strix halo or not?
Nobody, not one. We are unanimous about this. Clearly this will hold up. Despite all the naysayers commenting here, soon you too will assimilate. We look forward to your joining us soon
My SO outputs static HTML, moves it to a folder in Nextcloud, and a process syncs it to the server. I don't version her content, just the app code, but the sync target is backed up. I use nginx to serve the HTML at /whatever-folder/some-file-name and inject other client content.
I do something similar with the base model m4 Mac mini. It's my inference box right now, it handles Immich ML, photo prism AI, and runs Ollama talking to a small web app I call to summarize things. It's summaries are shit. The bigger the model, the more it hallucinates. So I settle for 1B and 4th grade responses
That's pretty neat. I don't use an e-reader and I'm not here proselytizing my workflow. But, to me, tools are usually best at one or two things, even though they might cover 20. That was my impression of wallabag. It had a lot of history and covered some niche workflows.
Linkwarden to me has one purpose, long-term archive and storage. So it has a different Restic backup policy since it outputs hard copies. It integrates with local LLM inference to tag and whatnot. I don't spend much time in its beautiful interface, nor do I use the social features. I'd be just as happy with a more minimal tool.
It's very helpful to be able to cite exact sources 10 years down the road, pulling from a hard copy. Especially with how fast the world moves today, the turmoil in the media and elected government.
Go figure, my ISP went down and my self-hosted blog is temporarily unavailable. I have a backup internet connection and fail-over WAN, so I didn't even notice the blip thanks to pfsense.
But I need dynamic DNS or to use Cloudflare's load balancers or something. Anyone have experience with this?
Not every site makes RSS available. Edit: and generally, I have so many RSS feeds, I'm scanning and looking for interesting things. At that point, I rarely have time to sit and read a long-form article. Rather than favorite it, mark it as unread or try to find it later, I send it to Readeck for when I'm ready to focus.
Navidrome for easy UPnP. Symphonium on Android. Foobar2000 on windows. Deadbeef on Linux.
I have a bunch of WiiM Mini devices and this setup works well for multi room playback.