publish
homepage
publish | homepage | |
---|---|---|
1 | 181 | |
119 | 16,141 | |
- | 8.7% | |
1.0 | 9.9 | |
almost 2 years ago | 3 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
publish
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Publish your Second Brain online with Logseq for free, forever
I feel the exact same way. I have some plugin ideas to smooth over the process as well. The built in publishing feature is a little rough and not optimized at all. I get the impression that logseq is investing a lot more energy on their own hosted solution than the self hosted publishing right now.
Despite the downsides, as someone who spent way too much time tweaking their own static site, it's really nice to be able to do just write and organize everything inside logseq and push my thoughts up at the end of the day. I was spending way to much time configuring and polishing the static site instead of just getting the notes out there.
Logseq had a tool to publish your notes as a static site, but it's out of date now unfortunately. https://github.com/logseq/publish
Since Logseq handles everything with plain text, some people are just generating a static site from those files directly, but you lose some of the advanced logseq features. I'm looking into doing this to make a "light" version of the notes as a static html site.
homepage
- Highly customizable homepage with Docker and service API integrations
- Homepage JDownloader widget
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Just started building a home server in my Raspberry Pi 3B+
It's Homepage. It's great for dashboarding, but has a few shortcomings in that you need to secure it behind a reverse proxy, otherwise you'll end up leaking credentials to the whole internet, unless you abstain from using its "connectors".
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Just started homelabbing in an old Raspberry Pi 3B+
I use dietpi as os, the dash board is from homepage
- Bookmark manager with a focus on organization?
- Is there a dashboard to list the services I have running?
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Dashboard for monitoring
I use Homepage. Has integrations with nearly every service I use and it's pretty easy to set up
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Setting up a local domain
Step 2. Build a Dashboard. There are many options for personal dashboards, but I run Ben Phelps' Homepage in a Docker container. It is fast and simple to configure with YAML files. Here is a screenshot of my home dashboard. Homepage has more features than I use. Any ports needed for your services will be added to the URLs in the Homepage config file. Then, all you need to do is create a bookmark to Homepage in your partner's browser.
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It's dashboard Wednesday! And I'm finally content with how mine looks;)
Good to see a dashboard post here that isnt just using Homepage :)
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What kind of Alpine user are you?
The control panel is called Homepage. I like it more than Heimdall. To manage Docker I use Portainer.
What are some alternatives?
Next.js - The React Framework
Heimdall - An Application dashboard and launcher
next-seo - Next SEO is a plug in that makes managing your SEO easier in Next.js projects.
homer-dashboard
next.js - The React Framework [Moved to: https://github.com/vercel/next.js]
Organizr - HTPC/Homelab Services Organizer - Written in PHP
homarr - Customizable browser's home page to interact with your homeserver's Docker containers (e.g. Sonarr/Radarr)
Portainer - Making Docker and Kubernetes management easy.
Speedtest-Tracker - Continuously track your internet speed
speedtest-tracker - Speedtest Tracker is a self-hosted internet performance tracking application that runs speedtest checks against Ookla's Speedtest service.
homer - A very simple static homepage for your server.
DashMachine - Another web application bookmark dashboard, with fun features.