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38
Joined
1 yr. ago

  • I’ve been using Conduit within a docker container for a while now, and it’s worked pretty well aside from the mautrix-signal bridge (this was fixed in version v7.0.0, I think). Other than conduit, I tried out dendrite, but the latency in sending messages was unbearable.

  • I’ve previously had issues with Matrix being incredibly slow and unreliable with federation (I’m self-hosting). However, that’s pretty much in the past now and I seem to have somehow resolved that issue.

  • I’d just like to add that you can use a temporary phone number service to sign up to Signal as you only need a phone number to register, not to actually use Signal.

  • Or you can use a doas implementation like OpenDoas, or maybe sudo-rs...

  • But the US can control US based companies, and create laws regarding how that data is used

    Does that matter if they don't create said laws - since they're equally interested in their citizens data as facebook, google, etc. are?

  • when you copy/paste a file on your computer it’s much faster than copying the file

    I think you meant ‘when you cut/paste a file’?

  • This is a pretty good option, though I also think something like what aseprite has done is pretty good too (compile it yourself for free, or pay for a precompiled binary available through e.g. Steam) - from what I can tell this setup is fairly profitable.

  • This probably isn't the answer you're looking for, but vpr being memory-safe isn't a benefit that it has over rm, since rm apparently doesn't allocate any memory (as @radiant_bloom@lemm.ee wrote).

    the first thing you mentioned as a benefit was memory safety.

    Looks like I worded my project description poorly. As I wrote in another comment, I meant that this alternative is memory-safe (being written in safe Rust), but not that rm isn't.

  • I don't know whether rm is memory-safe or not, but vpr is. By 'memory-safe alternative' I meant that this alternative is memory-safe, but not that rm isn't.

  • Nope - it's my own.

    Right now, you'd need to install Neovim packages through home-manager to get anything working, though.

  • But it’s still possible to give an estimate knowing a little bit about the hardware, right?

  • Happy to hear that you like it :)

  • Go for it! It's pretty simple but does help teach a few things.

  • That's great, thanks! I'll look into submitting it to the official homebrew tap sometime, and get back to you.

  • I’m now using Hyprland on NixOS (have been happily doing so for months now) after a configure several other window managers (leftwm, awesomeWM, etc.).

    I plan to share my setup sometime soon but I’ve got secrets in my configuration (and git history!) that I’ll need to remove first.

  • You'd have to copy the files to their designated paths. I've laid out the files so that just copying all the dotfiles - and directories - in the repository to your ~ should be enough to load all the configuration files. You'll also need to install all of the programs and fonts used in this configuration (in the repository's README.md) to make sure that everything works.

    That should be enough to set it up, but let me know if I can help you any further. Oh, and the configuration files are pretty old, so you might need to adjust them to account for any changes made to the programs they're used for.

  • To be fair, that one day he works is a pretty busy day.