markdown-blog
awesome-selfhosted
markdown-blog | awesome-selfhosted | |
---|---|---|
7 | 765 | |
88 | 178,743 | |
- | 2.5% | |
5.4 | 8.7 | |
about 1 month ago | 4 days ago | |
PHP | Makefile | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
markdown-blog
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Start a Fucking Blog
I still have a Blogger site just because I am not sure how to export all the data without days of work to copy the content, images and reformat everything to go to something like WordPress or markdown [0].
[0]: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
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Show HN: Markdown as Web Page/Site
I did something similar, but for adding a blog system to a server running PHP: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
The idea is that having it server-side allows for the page to be cached by a CDN (e.g. CloudFlare), so you end up serving static HTML, with better performance and SEO than JS-compiled markdown.
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How do you store your notes?
I store them on my server, some of them that I think can help others I put on my webserver with https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
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I moved this blog from Medium
If you host anywhere a LAMP stack: I built a very basic markdown-based in PHP: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
The idea is that Apache/PHP handle the loading/displaying of markdown files form a directory, so to add a new post you just create a new markdown file. It's very basic, but it's easy to customize with a bit of HTML/CSS/PHP.
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Ask HN: Hosted solutions to run a personal blog?
If you want something really basic, I created a tiny PHP blog that simply renders your Markdown files: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
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Ask HN: What are some tools / libraries you built yourself?
Working on building userTrack[0] I always encountered the need of various auxiliary tools. I had to implement a custom deploy system to build different variants of the product, to create a licensing server (to create and verify license codes and to allow downloads for valid license owners), a blogging platform[1], some JS snippets [2], etc.
Most of the times, the libraries/tools that you build yourself are either to connect and interact with a specific external service OR to have a simpler (only the features you need) or cheaper version of an existing product/platform.
[0]: https://www.usertrack.net/
[1]: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
[2]: https://github.com/Cristy94/dynamic-listener
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Around the Web 〜 RSS as a Facebook Alternative
What a coincidence, I just added RSS support for my open-source "blog" scaffold: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog#changelog
awesome-selfhosted
- Self-Hosted Is Awesome
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Browse Self-Hosted Software
None of these lists ever seem to be as fleshed out, up to date, or well organized as https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted , though imo any more attention on the self hosted scene is awesome. We're now self hosting everything at my co-op, and it's a dream. Saves us money, provides learning opportunities, potentially is getting us work (managed hosting providers asking if we can be a devshop for their clients, for example), and lets us give back to the FOSS community as we uncover bugs.
We use:
* Matrix / Synapse for comms (slack alternative) (managed hosting through etke.cc)
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Home Lab Guide
There are a ton of resources about HW aspects of home labs for beginners but not so much for what to run on them and why. There are lists like https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted but they are confusing for absolute beginners like me. Are there any good SE project guides you know?
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Ente: Open-Source, E2E Encrypted, Google Photos Alternative
This[1] seems like a well maintained repo.
And thank you for the pointers, we'll try to get ourselves added here :)
[1]: https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted
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I turned my open-source project into a full-time business
I've always felt like FOSS as a philosophy has been tangled up in trying to participate effectively in capitalism, when that was never really the point, nor really very possible unless you're lucky, nor really worth it. The origin of FOSS as I understand it from reading books like "Hackers" is from people that were mad that access was being restricted to systems and code from people that really wanted to use these systems and code, and hack them, and learn from them. I recall that one of the things Stallman likes to brag about from that time is not related to FOSS at all, but instead successfully decrypting a bunch of passwords, emailing the decrypted passwords to people, and recommending they instead set the password to an empty string instead. It was about keeping access to the system Free as in Beer.
I suppose some have argued that FOSS represents a Public Commons in the way that fields and wells and physical markets used to, but none of those things survived capitalism, so I don't see why a technological commons should be expected to either.
For me I've been thinking lately that perhaps those interested in FOSS should instead consider how we can use FOSS to detach ourselves from needing to participate in global capitalism at all. Is there FOSS technology we can use to liberate people from things they need to spend money on right now? An example could be the Global Village Construction Set: https://www.opensourceecology.org/gvcs/ a set of open source designs for things like hydraulic motors or microcombines or steam engines that you can build on your own, usually not for cheap, but for far, far cheaper than you could buy from John Deere. Here's another cool project, some guy has just been building things like solar panels and basic circuit boards on his property from very base components for years: https://simplifier.neocities.org/
Some other FOSS liberation examples:
Combining a tool like Jellyfin with Sonarr, Radarr, and etc, can liberate people from their 5 different media subscriptions. Or at least they can still buy DVDs and put them on Jellyfin to have the convenience of streaming with the media library of their own choosing.
Deploying Matrix or another FOSS communication tool can let organizations have enterprise-level communication software without paying HUGE seat-based license fees to corporations like Slack.
In fact there's many ways to liberate yourself from paid SaaS in this list: https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted at my co-op we self-host and deploy all our services for this reason, it saves us a TON of money.
I don't have many other examples to mind because this is something I'm actively still researching. Friends in Venezuela though especially tell me how FOSS technology can liberate in ways I wouldn't expect here with my 64gb RAM machine with the latest processor, that I can easily replace components on on a whim. Such as how they can keep all their broken down machines pieced together from junkyards running pretty ok on various linux distros, and how they can sell creative work using free tools like gimp (no, really) or darktable. Like as not they'll just pirate software, though, but apparently FOSS often runs better on shitty hardware.
Anyway my long term plan is to find or build more and more things that let people just not spend money on things anymore. That could be by making it easier to not have to throw things away anymore, or building tools to replace proprietary ones, or, idk, other ways I haven't thought of.
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Stream to Chromecast with resolved, vlc and bash
Dashboard in what sense? Is this what you had in mind or no?
https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted#per...
- Awesome-Selfhosted
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Ask HN: Favorite place to discover open source projects?
I often skim through various "awesome lists" (e.g. [1]) and communities interested in open source apps like r/selfhosted [2]
[1] https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted
[2] https://www.reddit.com/r/selfhosted/
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Ask HN: How do I leave Dropbox
1. https://nextcloud.com/ https://proton.me/drive https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted#fil...
2. Download all data locally then upload elsewhere.
3. https://help.dropbox.com/security/privacy-policy-faq#7.-How-...
- Calling all ADHD entrepreneurs. How'd you do it? How do you make good on your responsibilities?
What are some alternatives?
snipp.in - Fast, Light-weight, Notes, Snippet manager and code editor directly inside your browser
Technitium DNS Server - Technitium DNS Server
GoJS, a JavaScript Library for HTML Diagrams - JavaScript diagramming library for interactive flowcharts, org charts, design tools, planning tools, visual languages.
ThePornDB.bundle - ThePornDB.bundle Plex Metadata Agent
yadm - Yet Another Dotfiles Manager
speedtest - Self-hosted Speed Test for HTML5 and more. Easy setup, examples, configurable, mobile friendly. Supports PHP, Node, Multiple servers, and more
gutenberg - A fast static site generator in a single binary with everything built-in. https://www.getzola.org
focalboard - Focalboard is an open source, self-hosted alternative to Trello, Notion, and Asana.
nitter - Alternative Twitter front-end
stash - An organizer for your porn, written in Go. Documentation: https://docs.stashapp.cc
morss - Get full text RSS feeds
porn-vault - 💋 Manage your ever-growing porn collection. Using Vue & GraphQL