This. My NAS does a good job. But if it dies, I'll lose everything, hence wanting to backup my NAS photos.
Edit: Good job is stretching it. I need to invest in a new NAS next year.
This. My NAS does a good job. But if it dies, I'll lose everything, hence wanting to backup my NAS photos.
Edit: Good job is stretching it. I need to invest in a new NAS next year.
I guess I'll spend some time looking into Immich. Thanks for the suggestion.
Dunno why I find this hilarious, but I do. That said, I need to buy myself a new NAS before I think about one for a friend 🥺
The AI is about my pictures being used to train facial recognition when they're sitting in the cloud.
That's fair, but the reality is that Tumblr has been dancing on a knife's edge for a long long time. A community lead and funded effort like FireFish would provide the platform security needed for it to survive. But there's no two ways about it, it won't just happen magically. That said, TumblFish.social could truly be huge and propel FireFish to even surpass Lemmy in terms of users.
But they're not moving people to the fediverse, they're basically rolling out the same plugin integration that is available for WordPress already and the only reason they're even attempting that is because they've not given up on monetizing Tumblr and in order to do that, they have to garner more traffic of which they feel that Tumblr can get with the rising tide of primarily Mastodon.
I've said it before, I'll say it again, people should move their Tumblr accounts to FireFish.
The blog post is like the perfect analogy of my user experience. The title promises a mobile app, I load the page, scan for a Play Store link and leave frustrated. I guess I'll come back and actually read the thing later.
This has the potential to completely upend how Google licenses GMS and distributes Android, but we'll have to wait and see exactly what remedies the judge in this case decides to levy.
From The Verge: "Epic win: Jury decides Google has illegal monopoly in app store fight
Yep. Can actually install quite a lot on it.
I already have a Pixel Watch that I actually like quite a lot and enjoy the information summaries available via Fitbit. I guess what I'm asking for are open source alternatives to Fitbit that can collate the data and present it back to me in a beautiful fashion rather than new hardware?
My watch is very much an extension of my phone experience rather than an individual thing like fitness or sleep tracking. Being able to read notifications, answer phone calls and control my music are imperative to my user experience and the sleep and fitness tracking for me are just bonuses.
The Ente suggestion went right under my radar. It actually looks like a really solid suggestion, thank you.