I just wanted to show off a cool project I’ve found recently. Dashy is a very customizable dashboard that works perfectly for self-hosting projects. You can monitor any service that is reachable via http/https and use widgets like the universal web search interface, I’ve enabled in my installation.

I only use it as a glorified startup page for my browsers with the search function, but to give you an idea of what’s possible, you can take a look at some more creative examples as well.

6 points

Very nice!

I’m using heimdall right now and like it, but those creative examples with system stats would be awesome. I might have to switch.

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5 points

Very cool, it reminded me that most of all Linux distros seem to their ads in the Firefox install. Things like discussion boards and Amazon keeps getting pinned when I install a new Linux distro. It’s the norm but it’s kind of gross. Ask if I want all your ads.

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2 points
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Pretty cool. Dashy seems pretty much a start.me on steroids.

There’s also a kbin magazine for this (you can also post from Lemmy):

!startpages (https://kbin.social/m/startpages)

(L.E.: It didn’t render the handle as a hyperlink. I guess it was pretty clever for me to paste the link as well. You can copy and paste it in the search bar of beehaw, and you should find it)

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u/eclatnuudo’s browser?

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2 points

What’s the benefit of having Baikal when you can use Nextcloud’s CalDAV/CardDAV?

What is the Nextcloud AIO maintanance for?

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1 point
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Nextcloud AIO is just a link (just the local IP+port) to the maintenance interface of my NC installation. The officially supported docker image of Nextcloud (link here) has a built-in maintenance interface which allows you to update the installation and all dependencies.

Because Nextcloud is more complicated to maintain (especially when you have a lot of apps installed), I have split all that functionality across multiple smaller services. Baikal, WebDAV, Vaultwarden and Freshrss are technically not needed if I use Nextcloud apps, but all of those services are easily configurable as docker containers and if one of them fails, none of the others are affected. If I use Nextcloud for everything and treat it as a monolithic service, I would lose all functionality if the service fails. Because of that, I only use Nextcloud’s core functionality, which is syncing files across devices and automatically uploading all the pictures I take with my phone. For everything else, I have a dedicated service that is easier to set up and maintain.

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1 point

Understood, thank you for the information.

FYI, Syncthing is even lighter on resources if all you need from Nextcloud is syncing across devices.

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