Sandstorm
umbrel
Sandstorm | umbrel | |
---|---|---|
51 | 404 | |
6,637 | 6,370 | |
0.2% | 7.6% | |
5.4 | 9.9 | |
2 months ago | 10 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
Sandstorm
-
Website Impersonating a Desktop Environment
Sandstorm really had this kind of feeling. Not that it presented as a desktop environment visually - but it offered a much more integrated “computer” of documents versus silod web site apps where you need to open each site to see the files in the app. https://sandstorm.io/
-
Ask HN: Experience using your user's Google Drive instead of a database?
RemoteStorage https://remotestorage.io/ seems to be trying to do this too
I also really like the https://sandstorm.io approach which goes a little farther beyond
-
Tech Independence
They tried, it was called sandstorm https://sandstorm.io/
-
Ask HN: WordPress vs. Django/Flask?
I did read from somewhere, that with Wordpress SEO plugins etc some website got to top of search results.
Those that did website with other tech did not get same results, and thinked how to compete or survive.
For security, I use Sandstorm https://sandstorm.io fork of WordPress that generates static websites. But that does not work with some interactive plugins.
-
Plunder and Urbit
Urbit made the choice to use a bunch of silly new words for familiar concepts, not because they were inventing something so new that there were no words to describe it, but because they wanted to fool people into thinking that's what they were doing. Actually they just spent 10 years trying to do https://sandstorm.io/, but made it 10 times harder than it needed to be by coming up with a wacky new set of programming languages with silly names for everything.
That's funny, and it is OK to make fun of it.
-
Cap'n Proto 1.0
I don't work at Cloudflare but follow their work and occasionally work on performance sensitive projects.
If I had to guess, they looked at the landscape a bit like I do and regarded Cap'n Proto, flatbuffers, SBE, etc. as being in one category apart from other data formats like Avro, protobuf, and the like.
So once you're committed to record'ish shaped (rather than columnar like Parquet) data that has an upfront parse time of zero (nominally, there could be marshalling if you transmogrify the field values on read), the list gets pretty short.
https://capnproto.org/news/2014-06-17-capnproto-flatbuffers-... goes into some of the trade-offs here.
Cap'n Proto was originally made for https://sandstorm.io/. That work (which Kenton has presumably done at Cloudflare since he's been employed there) eventually turned into Cloudflare workers.
Another consideration: https://github.com/google/flatbuffers/issues/2#issuecomment-...
- 1Sub.dev – A world where people pay for software
- Sandstorm: Open-source platform for self-hosting web apps
umbrel
-
Escaping Surveillance Capitalism, at Scale
I really thought this article was going to offer a solution, not just enumerate the problems. I'm already all too familiar with the problems.
I like what Umbrel[0] is doing. They're essentially expecting that just like computing was able to move from centralized mainframes to homes, servers are poised to make the same migration.
I think they really need to solve redundancy, though. If I'm to self-host anything important on a home server, I need to know I'll have some way to use it even if my home server fails, especially if I'm not at home when it happens.
I'd love to see some kind of system where I could partner up with other Umbrel users for backups/the ability to restore connectivity. If I knew that in an emergency, I could call my friend in town or my brother out of state and there was some procedure that would allow me to connect to an encrypted backup of what I'm needing, I would feel a lot better about taking responsibility for my own system.
[0] https://umbrel.com
- Tech Independence
-
Running a full node. Now what?
I did my node via umbrel super easy to setup ;) https://umbrel.com
-
Questions and concerns about Umbrel node
It's also not secure according to the repo here: https://github.com/getumbrel/umbrel/blob/master/SECURITY.md
-
I've opened my first LN Channel
For those interested in setting up a their own lightning node, check out Raspibolt, Umbrel, Plebnet .
-
Full node first timer
There are a few raspberry pi solutions, including: - https://umbrel.com
- Self-hosted photo and video backup solution directly from your mobile phone
- Bitcoin core wallet
- Personal server OS for self-hosting
-
Synchronizing Bitcoin Node 🚀
I did it with the instructions/tutorial from https://umbrel.com/
What are some alternatives?
yunohost - YunoHost is an operating system aiming to simplify as much as possible the administration of a server. This repository corresponds to the core code, written mostly in Python and Bash.
CasaOS - CasaOS - A simple, easy-to-use, elegant open-source Personal Cloud system.
NextCloudPi - 📦 Build code for NextcloudPi: Raspberry Pi, Odroid, Rock64, curl installer...
raspiblitz - Get your own Bitcoin & Lightning Node running - on a RaspberryPi with a nice LCD
sovereign - A set of Ansible playbooks to build and maintain your own private cloud: email, calendar, contacts, file sync, IRC bouncer, VPN, and more.
start-os - Open source Linux distro optimized for self-hosting
Open and cheap DIY IP-KVM based on Raspberry Pi - Open and inexpensive DIY IP-KVM based on Raspberry Pi
DietPi - Lightweight justice for your single-board computer!
Bitcoin - Bitcoin Core integration/staging tree
Ansible-NAS - Build a full-featured home server or NAS replacement with an Ubuntu box and this playbook.
bitcoincore.org - Bitcoin Core project website