

@NuXCOM_90Percent I’m using tt-rss ( https://tt-rss.org ) and it works very well for me. It’s very easy to deploy with docker, you can apply filters and organize your RSS into categories.
In my android phone I use feeder
Aprendiz Senior. Incansable escuchador de música. Obrero de las telecomunicaciones. Maestro chasquilla de la programación. Consumidor de legumbres. Fan de Batman y el Tardígrado.
Opino de todo, a veces incluso de cosas sobre las que sé. Uso #Hashtag.
[Sometimes I also toot in -a very bad- english]
Intereses:
#Música #Music #Política #Cine #Movies #Fotografía #Privacy #OpenSource #Linux #Selfhosting #Ciencia #FreeInternet #Degoogle #Chile🇨🇱 #fedi22 tfr
@NuXCOM_90Percent I’m using tt-rss ( https://tt-rss.org ) and it works very well for me. It’s very easy to deploy with docker, you can apply filters and organize your RSS into categories.
In my android phone I use feeder
@zeromoney I have a self hosted streaming service for music with #Jellyfin. But i think there’s no an easy way to deploy it. You need to have some basic linux knowledge.
@mitexleo @selfhosted Jellyfin can also do that. You need to configure metada providers in library. But it is required that you organize your library directories by artist/album.
@mitexleo @selfhosted here you can find some information on how to organize your music directories in Jellyfin.
https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/server/media/music/
You need to add media library first.
@mitexleo @selfhosted artist/album. I use musucbrainz Picard to tag files, so jellyfin can identify easily.
@mitexleo @selfhosted I don’t know. I just use it with the official app or finamp.
Jellyfin. I’ve been using it for several months. It works really great for streaming music and also videos. I use the Finamp app in my phone for music.
@RubberElectrons @privacy @foremanguy92_
I’ve been using CalyxOS for a year now and I like it so much. I also tried GrapheneOS but I consider that sandboxed apps are harder to manage than microG in Calyx. I chose simplicity.
@Charger8232 @g0nz4 I guess in that case “proprietary” refers to the owners of the platform itself but not to the code of software. But then, they should make the distinction between proprietary/communitary and open source/proprietary code. Even between free/paid services. So, IMO that list from alternativeto is confusing.
The easy way, but not the most secure: identify GID and UID of files created by your samba docker container with “ls -la”. Then assign ownership of files and directories of shared volume to that user/group "chown -R GID:UID /path/to/shared”
@basic_user @selfhosted