music-explorer
dehydrated
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music-explorer | dehydrated | |
---|---|---|
5 | 36 | |
31 | 5,886 | |
- | 3.4% | |
8.0 | 2.3 | |
4 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
Shell | Shell | |
- | MIT License |
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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.
music-explorer
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When do we stop finding new music?
The article might describe a common scenario, but there are plenty of outliers. I hardly listen to music I liked in my teens and early twenties. I love discovering new music.
Many comments here are very insightful and discuss phenomena like high music diversity, music proliferation and easy of producing music, and automated recommendations.
One thing that has been occupying me is that curation is still harder than I'd like when using streaming tools like Spotify, YouTube Music, Apple Music, Tidal. Pandora had good roots with its music genome project, and have built on that. (I can't use it without a VPN since they discontinued supporting the country I mostly live in). It's probably a function of how I consume my music today - no longer desk-bound at work, but on the go, so iPhone (and Apple Watch) are primary tools. Being able to select/skip/preview/tune what I'm listening to is nowhere near as powerful as I'd like. I've written library curation tools in the past, these always expected me to spend significant dedicated time in front of a screen (e.g. a similar tool like the cool looking https://github.com/kristopolous/music-explorer, I think).
This has strong parallels to how older people consumed music - either totally passive curation (radio), or very deliberate (find music in record stores, at a friend's place, and/or select records/CDs in your own shelves). Today's ephemeral digital libraries are much lower effort, are huge and curation/selection tools are not easy enough to use, so I tend to fall back onto old favourites or recommendation engines that usually don't satisfy me.
A solution would be a much more configurable curation assistant that is also super easy to use (and, in my case) very accessible on a mobile device with 0-1 clicks (because I'm busy doing other things).
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Goodbye Spotify
Might as well drop what I use for my music discovery, my fairly poorly documented hacker-friendly set of tools:
https://github.com/kristopolous/music-explorer/
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Write Posix Shell
I'm a big fan of not posix bit instead modern bash and to all the complainers about dash and ash, I say "tough cookies".
Sometimes I'll even use zsh
Here's some example of a modern tool I have written for a subject I call "music discovery"
https://github.com/kristopolous/music-explorer/tree/master/t...
You'll see many languages in there.
If you don't like my practice then I guess don't use it. I've been using/developing these particular tools nearly every day for over 3 years and it works well for me.
I'm not going to say bash is awesome but it's pretty great for programming.
I use zsh as my interactive though
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Why DRY is the most over-rated programming principle
Sure. Related. It's an art.
Here's some code I wrote earlier, probably a good example
https://github.com/kristopolous/music-explorer/blob/master/w...
It's self contained, not very big, not trying to be fancy, as direct as possible
dehydrated
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Dehydrated: Letsencrypt/acme client implemented as a shell-script
From this commit:
https://github.com/dehydrated-io/dehydrated/commit/b116e6bc2...
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Running one’s own root Certificate Authority in 2023
I've had a lot of success with https://github.com/dehydrated-io/dehydrated . It exposes the different parts of the process (deploy challenge to DNS, deploy cert to filesystem, etc) as hooks, so it's pretty easy to integrate with anything and however you want, if you don't mind writing a bit of bash. There's a few scripts out there that use Cloudflare that you can use as well.
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How do you renew SSL certificates?
Depend on host's capability... - lego - dehydrated - caddy - in case it already works as a web server, it will automatically issue and renew certs
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SSL cert for DSM on Synology
Take a look at this great project : https://github.com/dehydrated-io/dehydrated/wiki : many dns providers are documented.
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Write Posix Shell
> Oh, and that 500-line shell script probably ends up being a 5000-line Python monster anyway.
The dehydrated ACME client is 2400 lines of bash/zsh:
* https://github.com/dehydrated-io/dehydrated
And its external dependencies are OpenSSL and cURL. The acme.sh shell ACME client is 8000 lines of shell:
* https://github.com/acmesh-official/acme.sh
The official Let's Encrypt client is written in Python, and the core 'executable' is much longer, and in addition it pulls in a boatload of dependencies:
* https://packages.debian.org/bullseye/python3-certbot
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ZeroSSL: XSS to session hijacking, stealing a private key (and password hash)
Dehydrated.io, damn few dependencies.
You're welcome.
https://github.com/dehydrated-io/dehydrated
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Looking for help with VIRTUAL_HOST set up and 502 Bad Gateway (possible bad SSL?)
I prefer dehydrated as an ACME client because it's written in bash and the only dependencies are sed, awk, grep, and openssl. This will also leave you free to customize your nginx config as necessary without having to try to cram your needs into a generator that doesn't account for what you're trying to do. It seems odd to me that the generator would create the intermediary file (as per your quoted output above), but then not put that in the nginx config.
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Knowing when to tell somone to call it quits...
This project has helped us immensely with cert renewals - https://github.com/dehydrated-io/dehydrated
- Does it really suck this much to set up SSL?
- Canonical releases Ubuntu 22.10 Kinetic Kudu
What are some alternatives?
FizzBuzzEnterpris
acme.sh - A pure Unix shell script implementing ACME client protocol
tinygrad - You like pytorch? You like micrograd? You love tinygrad! ❤️ [Moved to: https://github.com/tinygrad/tinygrad]
letsencrypt - Certbot is EFF's tool to obtain certs from Let's Encrypt and (optionally) auto-enable HTTPS on your server. It can also act as a client for any other CA that uses the ACME protocol.
ShellCheck - ShellCheck, a static analysis tool for shell scripts
acme-dns - Limited DNS server with RESTful HTTP API to handle ACME DNS challenges easily and securely.
FizzBuzz Enterprise Edition - FizzBuzz Enterprise Edition is a no-nonsense implementation of FizzBuzz made by serious businessmen for serious business purposes.
lego - Let's Encrypt/ACME client and library written in Go
bash-modules - Useful modules for bash
synology-tls - Automatically Update Let's Encrypt Wildcard Certificates for Synology NAS
portainer-traefik-letsencrypt - This repository will help you install Portainer with Traefik and Let's Encrypt with much ease!
certificates - 🛡️ A private certificate authority (X.509 & SSH) & ACME server for secure automated certificate management, so you can use TLS everywhere & SSO for SSH.