

They are good guys, they even have a mastodon account: https://mas.to/@alternativeto
They are good guys, they even have a mastodon account: https://mas.to/@alternativeto
You can easily import music metadata to musicbrainz with userscripts: https://github.com/murdos/musicbrainz-userscripts
I use the discogs and bandcamp one frequently.
Install the userscript in your browser, and if you find your album on discogs or other sites, it adds a button there, and with few clicks it transfers the data to musicbrainz. Then in picard search again, or copy the link from musicbrainz to the searchbar in picard
Then can you explain how google news works? I never used it, maybe a lot others have also no idea.
From google reader i switched to feedly after google shut it down in 2013, when I started self hosting switched to ttrss, then to freshrss when it became apparent the developer of ttrss is an actual neonazi. It was always working for me so i never looked for a replacement.
You can open a second window, and you can switch between them in the recent apps list. Triple dot menu -> new window.
Mopidy has a dlna plugin: https://mopidy.com/ext/dleyna/
I use this container for mopidy: https://hub.docker.com/r/ivdata/mopidy
I store it in mariadb
Not self hosted, but I use Windy for general weather predictions, it has some graphs if you click on a city.
If you love graphs meteo.pl has some nice graphs, but they are static, and only for Poland and neighbouring countries. Click meteogram on the top left and zoom in, than click on a red dot. E.g. this is for this week for Warsaw:
https://www.meteo.pl/um/metco/mgram_pict.php?ntype=0u&fdate=2025071006&row=404&col=250&lang=en (I can’t embed this image on lemmy)
Have you checked grafana? Here is a related tutorial: https://ibug.io/blog/2024/01/weather-forecast-with-grafana/
There is a history dashboard where you can change the date and which sensors you want to display: https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/history/ You don’t zoom but you have to add dates, same 2 sensors look like this there:
But it depends on the sensor if it supports this long term statistics, by default all data is saved only for 10 days, you can change these settings.
If filtering and zooming is the most important aspect for you this may be not the best solution, as this graph displays are not the best. The most powerful feature is that you can add local data sources.
I already use HomeAssistant and it has a nice graph interface, you can add any data you want. Plus I have a zigbee temp and humidity sensor on the balcony, so I can add local data to the one coming from external sources. E.g. here is a temperature graph, blue is the temperature from OpenWeatherMap, yellow is an indoor sensor, my outdoor sensor’s battery died again… It shows daily mean, min and max for the last 30 days:
You can find built in weather integrations here: https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/?cat=weather
About this graph card on the ui: https://www.home-assistant.io/dashboards/history-graph/
I already use HomeAssistant and it has a nice graph interface, you can add any data you want. Plus I have a zigbee temp and humidity sensor on the balcony, so I can add local data to the one coming from external sources. E.g. here is a temperature graph, blue is the temperature from OpenWeatherMap, yellow is an indoor sensor. It shows daily mean, min and max for the last 30 days:
You can find built in weather integrations here: https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/?cat=weather
Install Buster addon, you will never have to solve captchas in the future: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/buster-captcha-solver/
Do you want to import or record?
To import: star button -> import bookmarks and tracks. Then you can just pick it from your file browser. You can’t use it for navigation, it’s just displayed as an overlay.
To record: Hamburger menu -> Record track
CoMaps has far less features, but that’s the point. Some people love the simplicity, they don’t need all the confusing and overwhelming options of osmand.
Osmand has some performance issues on some devices, but Comaps was generally much more responsive on any device I tried it.
CoMaps has 3d buildings. Its map is very nice, but this is subjective.
CoMaps aims to be fully FOSS, this was not true for its predecessors, OM and Maps.me. Osmand is not fully foss.
If you are perfectly happy with osmand you don’t really need it, but for new users who are only familiar with the very basic interfaces of other commercial map apps, it can be much more welcoming.
The full story is in the Open Letter, but it’s long: https://openletter.earth/open-letter-to-organic-maps-shareholders-a0bf770c
AI summary from this comment from the osm forum:
Concrete Issues Leading to the Open Letter
- Misuse of Donations: Alexander Borsuk allegedly used project donations to cover personal holiday expenses, raising concerns about financial integrity.
- Lack of Financial Transparency: Contributors were consistently denied access to financial information, including total donations received and expenditures.
- Secret Hiring Practices: The hiring of the first full-time developer in January 2024 was kept secret from contributors, who only learned about it months later.
- Closed Decision-Making: Key project decisions, such as agreements with external partners (e.g., Kayak.com), were made without informing or consulting contributors.
- Shareholder Control: The governance structure allowed shareholders to make unilateral decisions, sidelining the input of long-term contributors.
- Conflict Among Shareholders: A significant conflict between shareholders Roman Tsisyk and Alexander Borsuk has led to a breakdown in collaboration, jeopardizing project stability.
- Lack of Accountability: The board, composed solely of shareholders, failed to rotate members or ensure accountability, leading to a stagnant governance model.
- Potential for Profit Motives: Contributors expressed concerns that the project could be sold or monetized for shareholder profit, undermining its community-driven mission.
- Inadequate Communication: Shareholders did not adequately communicate the role of Organic Maps OÜ as a for-profit entity, leaving contributors unaware of its implications.
- Violation of Open Source Values: While the maps generator code is technically available, the version in production contains private changes that are not disclosed, and the server used for downloading maps operates with proprietary elements, contradicting the project’s stated commitment to Free and Open Source Software principles.
We don’t map temporary features: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Good_practice#Don’t_map_temporary_events_and_temporary_features
If the road closure is less than a month long it shouldn’t be on OSM. A lot of people use the map offline, it’s better to have the default “open” state on the map for them.
Clients are free to mix the OSM basemap with their proprietary data. E.g. Magic Earth has some live traffic data from 3rd parties and from its users, and you can report temporary closures in the app as well and it displays them while driving. (Unfortunately it doesn’t consider them for routing)
OSM is not a map service like Gmaps, it’s a geospatial database and a community maintaining the database. OSM by itself is not really usable for end users, CoMaps and others should build their services on top of the data. This is the reason it’s not licensed by some kind of CreativeCommons, but it has its own special license ODbL. It allows easier commercial usage than CC-BY-SA, which was used by OSM before 2012. https://osmfoundation.org/wiki/Licence_and_Legal_FAQ/Why_CC_BY-SA_is_Unsuitable
The routing was not working for the same reason. OSM does not route, as it’s just a database. It just displays a 3rd party routing engine which uses outdated data, from before your change.
Instance independent link: !Ollama@lemmy.world
Share links to communities this way, so everyone can subscribe easily.
You should also post about this in !newcommunities@lemmy.world and !communitypromo@lemmy.ca for better discoverability!
Very nice project! Thank you for using OpenStreetMap! I love it when the project I contribute to gets used in interesting projects like this!
But some quick notes, related to the map display: It’s called OpenStreetMap, there is no s at the end, written in CamelCase without spaces. The other more important problem is you forgot to include the attribution text on the map. For using OSM there is only one requirement, you have to display “© OpenStreetMap” somewhere on a corner of the map. More info about this on the website of the OSM foundation: https://osmfoundation.org/wiki/Licence/Attribution_Guidelines
I see the attribution text is displayed on http://trails.tchncs.de/ but not on https://demo.wanderer.to/ so I don’t know what’s going on.
The basemap display on the demo website uses the tile server from openstreeetmap.org. This is very discouraged, and also can give bad experience to users. The tiles on osm.org are raster tiles, they are regenerated automatically after a change in the map data, they are aimed as a tool for map contributors, not end users. You can read more about this here: https://operations.osmfoundation.org/policies/tiles/
There is a new totally free maplibre compatible vector tile provider, which uses the same map data, I recommend to switch to OpenFreeMap. Users can also self host OpenFreeMap, so some really privacy minded users could totally self host the full project this way.
It seems you are missing some very basic knowledge, if you have questions like this. Watch/read some tutorials to get the basics, than ask specific questions.
This guy does the same thing as you: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yLduQiQXorc
This was like the 3rd result for searching for nginxproxymanager on yt.
Just the heads up, that cpu is ancient. Its performance is comparable to an Rpi 4, but that old cpu consumes 30W+ while a full rpi maxes around 6-7 W. Rpi 5 is around 4-5 times more powerful with third power.
So it’s good if you just tinkering with old hardware for fun, but you can buy far more powerful modern hardware for only several dollars if you look at the second hand market.
Also I remember, I dealt with Toshibas from that era, they were quite locked down, e.g. you couldn’t install upstream nvidia drivers on them only the outdated ones signed by Toshiba. So it’s not unexpected that some options like that are missing in bios settings.