convos
makesite
convos | makesite | |
---|---|---|
17 | 9 | |
1,006 | 1,762 | |
0.5% | - | |
8.4 | 0.0 | |
19 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
Perl | Python | |
Artistic License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
convos
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Show HN: GodotOS: A Fake Operating System Interface Made in the Godot Engine
Excellent idea! You'll have a mature, open standard protocol under the hood, with no vendor lock-in, excellent extensibility, and great modern frontends like The Lounge (https://thelounge.chat/) or Convos (https://convos.chat/) to choose from (and you can choose).
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Wave of Spam Hits IRC
And UnrealIRCD still rocks. For a quick-and-dirty setup I've deploy ng-ircd but Unreal has always been my go-to for anything serious. If nothing else it can be useful as a backup or internal platform during the rare events that Slack or Discord are having an incident. The common complaint is a lack of channel back-log but it can be front-ended with TheLounge [1] or Convos [2]. I personally prefer to handle that with gnu screen or tmux and WeeChat [3].
[1] - https://github.com/thelounge
[2] - https://github.com/convos-chat/convos/
[3] - https://weechat.org/
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Matrix 2.0: How we’re making Matrix go voom
For the other layers one can front-end IRC with TheLounge [1][2] or Convos [3][4]. TheLounge only persists history in private mode meaning that users are created in that front-end and chat messages are in Redis. For small networks or groups of friends this is probably fine.
Notably missing is voice chat. I use the Mumble client [5] with the Murmur or uMurmur [6] server which is light-weight enough to run on ones home router. I use it on Alpine Linux, works great. It's not a shiny and attention grabbing as Discord but probably fine for everyone else. For people to create their own voice channels would require the full-blown Murmur server.
[1] - https://github.com/thelounge
[2] - https://thelounge.chat/
[3] - https://github.com/convos-chat/convos/
[4] - https://convos.chat/
[5] - https://www.mumble.info/
[6] - https://github.com/umurmur/umurmur/wiki/Configuration
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IRCv3 2022 Spec round-up
FWIW TheLounge [1] and Convos [2] can front-end an IRC server giving it much of the look of a modern client and also chat persistence when using TheLounge in private mode. The trade-off in my opinion is scalability. With a bog standard IRCD I can handle tens of thousands of clients per node. Adding web persistent chat adds memory usage.
[1] - https://github.com/thelounge https://thelounge.chat/
[2] - https://github.com/convos-chat/convos/ https://convos.chat/
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Eww: ElKowars wacky widgets
IRC is a mature, extensible, open protocol, with a wide variety of server and client implementations to suit many use cases, servers can be self-hosted and federated, and modern web-based clients like The Lounge or Convos offer a user experience equivalent to Discord, Slack, etc.
- Show HN: Convos Self Hosted IRC Web Client
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Looking for OSS version of Teams For Buisnesses
Standard IRC with a web interface like The Lounge or Convos
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Eric July - Discord "goes woke", begins banning "medical misinformation".
And there are some great web-based clients like the Lounge and Convos that offer an equivalent UX to Discord or Slack, are open-source, self-hostable, and based on a mature, reliable, and extensible open protocol.
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IRC client with web interface?
Take a look at convos to see if it fits your needs: https://convos.chat/
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Simplicity of IRC
There are web front-ends to IRC that can mitigate message loss without having to run bouncers. Convos [1] and TheLounge [2] come to mind but there are others [3]
[1] - https://convos.chat/
[2] - https://thelounge.chat/
[3] - https://www.ilmarilauhakangas.fi/irc_technology_news_from_th...
makesite
- Makesite.py
- Makesite: Simple, lightweight, and magic-free static site/blog generator
- Own your work
- Basic blog based on static markdown files?
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Simplicity of IRC
Thank you for sharing the link to the source code. My simple site generator is based on my wife's project makesite.py[1]. In fact, I used her site generator for a few years before I went all in on Common Lisp for my personal projects. Then I reimplemented makesite.py in Common Lisp.
[1]: https://github.com/sunainapai/makesite/
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A good replacement for Drupal that is docker friendly?
I ended up using the developer-focused https://github.com/sunainapai/makesite , but I heard Hugo and Jekyll have plenty of themes that I assume can be dropped in. Good luck!
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Blog about what you've struggled with
I've been using makesite.py, which is ~200 lines of python, dumping the picture in a pics folder and then hand editing the markdown.
Maybe a few lines of code and template work would let you add a custom template that would automatically add a folder worth of images.
https://github.com/sunainapai/makesite/blob/master/makesite....
- Ask HN: What novel tools are you using to write web sites/apps?
- Looking for a Ghost alternative
What are some alternatives?
LANraragi - Web application for archival and reading of manga/doujinshi. Lightweight and Docker-ready for NAS/servers.
Pelican - Static site generator that supports Markdown and reST syntax. Powered by Python.
The Lounge - 💬 Modern, responsive, cross-platform, self-hosted web IRC client
Nikola - A static website and blog generator
DFeed - D news aggregator, newsgroup client, web newsreader and IRC bot
Tinkerer - Python blogging engine
slackcat - Post to Slack from stdin
Cactus - Static site generator for designers. Uses Python and Django templates.
spcss - A simple, minimal, classless stylesheet for simple HTML pages
Lektor - The lektor static file content management system
Kiwi IRC - 🥝 Next generation of the Kiwi IRC web client
Hyde - A Python Static Website Generator