

If you keep feeding the monster, you know what will happen.
If you keep feeding the monster, you know what will happen.
It’s a rat race. You can only win by not playing.
This is a great project, everyone on organic maps should switch.
Does it support any models that can summarize 600 page PDF files?
How easy is it to install the software itself and AI models?
Do you plan to integrate with any of the following?:
People still on Windows 10 by next year: I never got a virus.
Bro, you never got a virus that you know of.
Ahora entiendo tu comentario, gracias por clarificar.
That’s great news! I didn’t know that. Is there a Stalwart service provider in the EU ?
Yeah, that’s what I said in the post you’re replying to. Is this a case of weird cross-platform federation?
They have improved performance in this release, although judging from their release notes it is targeting larger infra, so I don’t believe these improvements would benefit your setup. Still, good news for software this new.
Being one of the few JMAP servers, adding these features is great although there’s still some things yet to consider. The iCalendar standard also includes tasks and notes and Stalwart hasn’t implemented those yet. Calendar scheduling is coming in the next few months, so that’s good news.
I can’t wait until service providers in privacy respecting countries start using complete solutions that enable users to really replace Google with a standards compliant alternative.
Does it sync browsing history?
Which iCalendar (DAV) provider are you using?
I don’t think the EU will let it die. Maybe Mozilla dies and Firefox gets reborn as a EU (ZENDIS?) project.
Try to get MORE money so that they can pay their CEO.
It also integrates well with Home Assistant and supports OBD2 devices, which is a very nice bonus.
OPDS is the standard for ebook distribution. Most eBook apps support it, I bet your boox does too.
You can subscribe to a feed and browse the catalogue and download a book. Some popular OPDS catalogues are:
If you use Linux, check out Foliate reader from Flathub.
CasaOS is very easy to use and it’s a good starting option so you can test if self-hosting is for you. If you outgrow CasaOS, I can recommend an intermediate solution called: Coolify.
Is there a dumb-proof installer to run a matrix server in an offline LAN party?
That is not true on Linux.