

@lambalicious @jasonweiser Not sure seafile should be listed as an alternative. We couldn’t include it on Debian due to copyright sketchiness/plagerism…
he/him. from the birdsite (@Andres4NY and before that @NEGreenways).
#Dad #NYC #Bikes #FreeTransit #SafeStreets #BanCars #Debian #FreeSoftware #ACAB #Vegetarian #WearAMask
My wife’s an #epidemiologist, so you’ll get some #COVID talk too.
Trans rights are human rights.


@lambalicious @jasonweiser Not sure seafile should be listed as an alternative. We couldn’t include it on Debian due to copyright sketchiness/plagerism…
@Used_Gate I suggest getting this in f-droid if you want to see more usage.
Also, it looks like the actual development happens in private and then is thrown over the fence; https://gitlab.com/here/_forawhile/onionphone/-/commit/2c4afc462a42852f0d54dda0b333db9019f3d69e


@myrmidex @superglue The fork is interesting. An earlier version forgot my navidrome server (and nuked my download cache), which was annoying; however, it’s gained some features that I really like. For example, when an album finishes it starts playing similar songs from other albums/artists. I didn’t think I would like this, but it ended up being pretty great (and it’s configurable if I need to turn it off). Very spotify-ish, but limited to stuff you have on your server.


@CmdrShepard49 @orsetto Also, don’t use hardware raid. If the controller ever fails, you lose all your data unless you can replace it with the same controller. If you do have a raid controller, you configure it to do JBOD so you can use software raid (or snapraid); at which point, you can do the same thing with consumer hardware.
@lambalicious Syncthing is what I replaced seafile with, fwiw. Works great!