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How do you do the ingredients for a recipe? Does it understand “1tbsp” and things like that?
Logseq is worth looking into as well. You’d have the same sync conundrum as Obsidian, and can solve it the same way too.
kambusha@feddit.chto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•This is what being a Redditor does to your life2·2 years agoMore specifically, what’s the connection to Reddit?
kambusha@feddit.chto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Clipshare: Copy anywhere, paste anywhere, end to end encrypted7·2 years agoInsert to copy, and then Insert to paste.
kambusha@feddit.chto Open Source@lemmy.ml•What's stopping banks from creating FOSS (or atleast open-source) banking solutions (apps)?20·2 years agoA couple of reasons:
- Who would contribute? Banks are highly regulated and sometimes deal with complex products that most Devs don’t have a background on. Even most Devs in banks rely on a team of business analysts, designers etc to shape the requirements. Add on top of that the general negative perception of banks, I can’t think of a large open-source community forming.
- Competition. Bank’s primarily compete with each other. They all offer very similar products, and any advantage they can gain by developing proprietary software will be explored.
- Third-party apps. Banks use a TON of third-party apps behind the scenes. A lot of times they will purchase licenses for existing products and then customise on top of that.
- Outsourcing. Even when they are building the app “in-house” they may have outsourced the development to another company, and will then just maintain the finished product.
- Banks move slooooowly. As it’s a highly regulated industry, every deployment needs to go through a ton of red-tape. An exploit found in public might take weeks to be resolved internally.
- Reward is not worth risk. It simply isn’t a priority and they can’t see any benefit for doing it. It’s more likely to cause a reputation risk than not.
kambusha@feddit.chto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Ladder: selfhosted alternative to 12ft.io (bypass pay walls)English34·2 years agoI didn’t realise 12ft.io has gone down but I believe their original slogan was along the lines of, “for every 10ft wall, there’s a 12ft ladder”, hence the name.
This policy was last updated in March, 2023.
kambusha@feddit.chto Programming@beehaw.org•How to add hard-coded website to square space?1·2 years agoYou’ll want to create a new firebase project, install the firebase CLI on your computer and then use the CLI to: login to firebase, select the project you created, and then using the CLI run
firebase deploy
wherever your code is. That should use firebase “hosting” to serve your static files.I find Google Cloud’s documentation extremely confusing (including firebase), so you’re not alone on that front. Took a lot of searching & troubleshooting to finally get my setup working as I intended.
kambusha@feddit.chto Programming@beehaw.org•How to add hard-coded website to square space?4·2 years agoCan’t comment on square space, but you could maybe try firebase (google), github pages, or netlify as alternatives?
Just chiming to say I feel the same sometimes. But at the same time I’m also amazed and excited by the different possibilities. There’s usually never a black or white solution, although there are some best-practices that have established over time.
As you mentioned already, I think it helps to think of all the technologies, languages, frameworks etc. as tools to solve a problem.
kambusha@feddit.chto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[Solved] I want to ditch Nextcloud notesEnglish5·2 years agoI quite like Obsidian too. Markdown note app that has desktop & mobile versions. You can create templates and have it so that a new note using a template is opened automatically when you open the app (e.g. for daily notes). It also supports a lot of different community created plugins.
I sync across android & linux via google drive for free, otherwise Obsidian also has a paid sync feature.
kambusha@feddit.chto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Translate You: Android Privacy-Focused Translator App2·2 years agoThis is cool! I’ve been using DeepL for the longest time but their app has become extremely sluggish lately to load. Any recommendation for engine that works best for English/Spanish Spanish/English?
What’s the main motivation for an open-source alternative?
It’s an interesting idea. I’m guessing the largest hurdles would be: trust, funding, and legal. A large part of it I think depends if it’s being run altruisticly or as a business.
Uber/Lyft and others have come under intense legal scrutiny all over the world. The drivers typically need to purchase & obtain a license to be able to drive, and come into agreement with local taxi operators.
What motivates the drivers to drive, ie is this a job or are they volunteering? Does each ride cost or are the rides free? If the rides are free, are the drivers doing it out of the goodness of their hearts, or are donations covering the rides? If rides aren’t free, who is processing those payments? Who decides what drivers get paid and what customers get charged?
Lastly, as a ride-operator, how do I build trust with my drivers? As a customer, how can I trust the instance I am with? If something happens in a ride, is there someone I can contact? Can I get refunds? What if something even worse happens, who is on the hook?
kambusha@feddit.chto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Looking for OSS for non-profit membership organization3·2 years agoI was going to suggest OpenCollective but I’m not sure if they have any type of voting mechanism. It does provide financial transparency though.
kambusha@feddit.chto Open Source@lemmy.ml•What are some FOSS programs that you think are a far better user experience than their counterparts?3·2 years agoHaven’t used PHPTools, but I use xdebug in VSCode for php debugging
kambusha@feddit.chto Open Source@lemmy.ml•What are the best open source weather apps that use the Open-Meteo or OpenWeather APIs?48·2 years agoI’m using Breezy Weather and really liking it so far. Has a good widget as well.
I do feel kinda bad for people. There’s very few jobs left where you don’t interact with a computer in some form or another, and the reality is that it’s not for everyone. Of course most people can benefit from using these “tools” but since they’re always upgrading, there keeps being something new to learn.
Personally, I love technology and playing around with new tech. However, if I’m great at sales or a lawyer or something, that’s where I add value, not in knowing how a computer works. So I can see how people get frustrated with it.
In the end it boils down to, pretty much everyone needs IT, but IT doesn’t need everyone. Think about it, when was the last time you worked at a company where an employee didn’t have a computer or need a computer for some task that they do?
I don’t even think any apps that use the API are allowed to use “Spot” in their name.
https://developer.spotify.com/documentation/design