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namelivia, in Grocery shopping apps

I’m using Mealie for this, and so far suits my needs

monkeyman512, in Best practices for media + piracy server

I think 2 good concepts come to mind to help you make choices:

  1. Least privilege - Only give things/people just enough access/authority to get the job done. A good example is sonarr doesn’t need access to your personal photos to do it’s job, so don’t give it access if to them.
  2. Defense in layers - Nothing is perfect and you can make mistakes in configuration. Don’t rely on a single point of failure to protect you. If you want remote access use a VPN. But also take steps in your network like putting a password on the logins.
MajorHavoc, in What is your prefered way to get audiobooks/podcasts/ebooks for your audiobookshelf?

It would be a shame not to shamelessly plug author (and anti-DRM activist) Cory Doctorow here. He has some really fun science fiction, and sells his audio books DRM-free through various sources.

Shamelessly, because lots of his protagonists are self-hosters of various types.

Scew, in What is your prefered way to get audiobooks/podcasts/ebooks for your audiobookshelf?
@Scew@lemmy.world avatar

I find them online and use javascript to rip them into a text file and use @Voice premium on android to read/listen to the text files. I got the premium @Voice because I didn’t realize how much of a staple having an app that can read most types of files was going to be.

Cqrd, in What is your prefered way to get audiobooks/podcasts/ebooks for your audiobookshelf?

I find it on a truck that could find in my comment history.

ZeldaFreak, in What is your prefered way to get audiobooks/podcasts/ebooks for your audiobookshelf?
@ZeldaFreak@lemmy.world avatar

Audible + OpenAudible. OpenAudible does “stuff” and you end up with audio files, that you can listen on most devices. Don’t know and care how they do this. Its not free but so is Audible.

When you have an active Audible subscription, you also have access to free Audiobooks. You can download and convert them too. But be aware, that Audible is rate limited. Had downloaded a ton of free audiobooks and after a short limit (maybe 1 hour), I got a long limit for around 24 hours. But I still use Audible. I just have it as a backup and this way I can give my family access to the books I have. But so far my mother only listen to the ones I got for free. I like Science Fiction a lot but my mother not.

A college who I recommended Audiobookshelf, has a subscription from a German only site (Thalia), where apparently the Audiobooks can be downloaded as MP3s. So far I prefer Audible, even with DRM, just because the availability. Not all books I listen to, are available on that site or much later.

Buckshot, in What is your prefered way to get audiobooks/podcasts/ebooks for your audiobookshelf?

I use audible, then download with audible-cli and decrypt with ffmpeg.

poVoq, (edited ) in Joplin alternative?
@poVoq@slrpnk.net avatar

There are multiple options with Orgmode clients. For a webview Filestash supports Orgmode, but there are also some dedicated options I think.

Matt, in What is your prefered way to get audiobooks/podcasts/ebooks for your audiobookshelf?

I use Downpour for Audiobooks. It is similar to Audible where audiobooks can be purchased individually, or there is a subscription that provides credits to purchase audiobooks. The audiobooks are drm-free and can be downloaded. I have not found a way to automate the download and transfer to my Audiobookshelf server, but I don’t mind doing it manually considering I average around two or three audiobooks a month.

thisfro, (edited ) in Grocery shopping apps

Another thought: I use grocy (or at least try to use it) to have an overview of my stock and know when an open item in the fridge neeeds to be used before spoiling. But I just use a shared note on nextcloud for shopping, which is good enough for two people. But of course there is no meal planning or recipe management

theRealBassist, in File server with on-demand sync, preserve the filesystem, and runs without external DB?

I don’t think this would solve your particular use case. However, SSHFS is absolutely amazing for remote smb share access.

I used it on my laptop to access my home NAS for years.

Tiritibambix, in SOLVED. Has anyone installed Shotshare using docker-compose ?
@Tiritibambix@lemmy.ml avatar

To give more information:

I’m a portainer user and wanted to try shotshare as is looks exactly like what I need :)

I followed these steps: sudo mkdir Shotshare and cd into this directory sudo touch .env database.sqlite sudo chown 82:82 .env database.sqlite

and then tried this docker-compose:


<span style="color:#323232;">version: "3.3"
</span><span style="color:#323232;">services:
</span><span style="color:#323232;">  shotshare:
</span><span style="color:#323232;">    ports:
</span><span style="color:#323232;">      - 2000:2000
</span><span style="color:#323232;">    environment:
</span><span style="color:#323232;">      - HOST=:2000
</span><span style="color:#323232;">      - ALLOW_REGISTRATION=false
</span><span style="color:#323232;">    volumes:
</span><span style="color:#323232;">      - /srv/dev-disk-by-uuid-7fe66601-5ca0-4c09-bc13-a015025fe53a/Files/Shotshare/shotshare_data:/app/storage
</span><span style="color:#323232;">      - /srv/dev-disk-by-uuid-7fe66601-5ca0-4c09-bc13-a015025fe53a/Files/Shotshare/database.sqlite:/app/database/database.sqlite
</span><span style="color:#323232;">      - /srv/dev-disk-by-uuid-7fe66601-5ca0-4c09-bc13-a015025fe53a/Files/Shotshare/.env:/app/.env
</span><span style="color:#323232;">    restart: unless-stopped
</span><span style="color:#323232;">    container_name: shotshare
</span><span style="color:#323232;">    image: mdshack/shotshare:latest
</span><span style="color:#323232;">networks: {}
</span>
Smiling_Fanatic, in Grocery shopping apps
starkzarn, in Grocery shopping apps

Ran into a similar conundrum. We use mealie for recipe management and occasionally meal planning, but the shopping list is clunky. We resorted to just making a list on a card in Planks. Not purpose-built, but it has worked rather well for us.

deFrisselle, (edited ) in Suggestions for NAS (or other hardware) solution to home setup
@deFrisselle@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

After doing my research, I’m going to be using XigmaNAS as the OS for my NAS build

XigmaNAS.com

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