You want your UPS to be NUT compatible The primary goal of the Network UPS Tools (NUT - see ) project is to provide support for Power Devices, such as Uninterruptible Power Supplies, Power Distribution Units, Automatic Transfer Switches, Power Supply Units and Solar Controllers. NUT provides a common protocol and set of tools to monitor and manage such devices, and to consistently name equivalent features and data points, across a vast range of vendor-specific protocols and connection media types. NUT provides many control and monitoring features, with a uniform control and management interface. The actual post is a bit longer with some screenshots so is better viewed on my blog at . #technology #UPS #opensource #openstandards
You can once again buy an official Commodore C64 "Basically, there is a whole gamut of ways to get some part of the C64 experience, ranging from emulator-only to a full hardware DIY or pre-assembled format. Each of which come with their own price tag, starting at $0 for running VICE on your existing system. With so much choice we can only hope that the renewed Commodore company will become something more than Yet Another C64 Experience." The video in the linked article gives a good run down of the various Commodore C64 options up to now, before ending with the details and cost of the revived "official" C64. Apart from holding the world record for the most microcomputer sales of all time. I had one as well, after my ZX81, and it was a major breakthrough with colour graphics, sound, etc. I have very happy memories from that C64, although I must say I did enjoy my Amiga 500 a lot more as the game quality was just that much better, and it had a lot of games. I still play some of those Amiga games today such as Ports of Call every now and again on my Linux PC using an emulator. So the question is, would there still be interest in 2025 for the C64? Well it certainly has been modernised a bit with regard to HDMI and peripheral support, and apparently many thousands of the unofficial C64s are still being sold. See #technology #Commodore #retrocomputing
Homepage - An Open Source Self-Hosted Dashboard Homepage is a modern, fully static, fast, secure fully proxied, highly customizable application dashboard with integrations for over 100 services and translations into multiple languages. Easily configured via YAML files or through docker label discovery. With features like quick search, bookmarks, weather support, a wide range of integrations and widgets, an elegant and modern design, and a focus on performance, Homepage is your ideal start to the day and a handy companion throughout it. My video explains why I moved from Heimdall to Homepage. It also shows what various service and information widgets are available, what my dashboard looks like, what the various parts do, and how the configuration files work. My docker compose file is also unpacked. Watch #technology #selfhosted #opensource #dashboard
Various desktop Linux tips for newbies I'm also seeing more and more new Linux users popping up. They're noticeable for often saying "why did they not do this earlier". The point is, today's Linux is very different from 20+ years ago. It generally just installs and works, often looking very similar to what users experienced before (meaning basically everything can be done in the graphical menus and windows). Linux gets a bit more interesting if you venture into using the AUR or Git versions of apps (you have to enable this, as these are more bleeding edge). This is where dependencies may break, and you need a bit of terminal skill often to fix things, but the good news is, you're not losing any data. Over the years I've also opted to having all my user data (the stuff under /home) in its own partition so that is it fully separate from the main OS. The reason was in the early years I used to format the drive and do clean installs, or was distro hopping. Nowadays, I just use Manjaro KDE, and it just keeps updating all then time - have not reinstalled for many years now (and no nagging to activate it or end of life coming). You may wonder what happens if a distro is no longer supported? Well firstly it keeps working, and it may well still pull some patches and updates. But usually you will be able to migrate to using some other distro, and your user data all stays intact. But this is also a good reason for picking one of the many mainstream distros, that should be around still for a very long time (measuring that long time in terms of Windows release cycles). No-one has to move to Linux, but for those curious enough to want to find out more, the usual approach is to start with a liveboot version and just run it from a USB stick or external drive to test it out a bit. The next step is typically to install it side-by-side with Windows, but I'd really recommend a separate hard drive, as Windows does some odd things to the boot partition sometimes. Linux can access the user data on a Windows drive, but I'd be careful with that, as Windows can lock the drive if it uses hibernation mode. The point is, lots of things are possible for Linux. One will find of course that many companies only bring out their software for Windows and macOS. And example is Stream Deck. But I discovered two excellent 3rd party apps that work even better under Linux with Stream Deck. Da Vinci Resolve for example produces world-class video editing software that runs on Linux natively, but there is also Kdenlive that will work just as well for most users. So always do a bit of research before buying software or hardware to choose wisely. Personally, for me, it's more about the freedom to what I want with it. See #technology #Linux #opensource
Using Signal groups for activism "Things are heating up. Millions of people are taking to the streets against Trump's rising authoritarianism. Communities around the US are organizing to defend against ICE raids, to protest Israeli genocide, for mutual aid, and for other forms of fighting fascism. Signal can help people safely organize in all of these contexts. Signal groups, in particular, are more powerful than you might be aware of, even if you already use them all the time. In the linked post you'll see how." Of course, activism is also about a much wider range of topics than the above, and many have been running for decades. Apart from activism in 1st Word Countries, there is also activism in many 3rd World Countries, which in many cases are really life and death situations if users are caught. Signal is not THE most private network around. There are many others like Threema (not public link group invites though) and SimpleX (really open group invites with custom names per group) that enable far more anonymity. In other words, they don't require any form of registration or a mobile number to work, meaning there is even less to link back to any individual user. But this is why I wanted to make this post. It often comes back to many people wanting to find their friends on their chat app. Yes, finding friends makes communicating easier, but that in itself does leak metadata. The reason I only have two or three contacts on Threema and SimpleX are that it is way more difficult to build out your network. This is where Signal does strike an excellent middle path - it is simpler to use and find friends, whilst also going as far as it can to guard your privacy. It has some good group options (including an announcements only group) and most importantly where it differs from WhatsApp and Telegram, are that it's metadata cannot be accessed by Signal (WhatsApp goes as far as actively sharing users metadata with advertisers and partners, which is why WhatsApp has so many businesses on board). Telegram may handle far bigger numbers for its groups, but the problem is users do need to set up their privacy settings very carefully, and their metadata is at the risk of being subpoenaed now, and of course Telegram's encryption is proprietary. Signal's groups are limited to 1,000 users, and another issue may be that there is one profile across all groups (unlike SimpleX where you choose a name for each group you belong to, but it does not scale well to large groups at all). Signal does hit a sweet spot though and should really be adopted by a lot more mainstream users. Signal's user privacy is way ahead of both WhatsApp and Telegram, yet it is just as easy and intuitive to use. But, as I mentioned above Signal is not perfect. To summarise those shortcomings, they are: 1. Even announcement-only groups are limited to 1,000 users (Telegram has 200,000 for normal groups and unlimited users for broadcast groups). 2. A phone number is required to register the account initially (SimpleX and Threema do not require anything). 3. The profile your friends see is the same profile seen in a group (SimpleX allows different names) so select your profile name with this in mind, although the phone number is hidden by default. See #technology #privacy #chatapps #activism
How to Clear RAM Cache, Buffers, and Swap in Linux Without Reboot "Like any other operating system, GNU/Linux has implemented memory management efficiently and even more than that. However, if any process is eating away your memory and you want to clear it, Linux provides a way to flush or clear the RAM cache. In general, it is not a good idea to manually free up Buffer and Cache in Linux which might be used by the Linux kernel, which is designed to manage these resources efficiently, and manually clearing them can disrupt system performance." So, you can choose to apply any of these commands, and they won't do any harm, but the closing thought is that you should not normally really need to do so. Linux will use available RAM anyway so do not think that if it only uses 20% of RAM that is better than 80%. See #technology #Linux #opensource
If you find OpenStreetMap a bit difficult to plan off-road routes, try OpenRouteService OpenRouteService (ORS) is an open source route planner service that leverages OpenStreetMap data to provide a variety of routing and spatial analysis services. It actually uses a forked and modified version of the GraphHopper routing engine (another option that can be used, and which is present inside OpenStreetMap as a routing alternative). I was trying to plan a 4x4 trail between two places, but was finding that OpenStreetMap was routing me via a gravel road I did not want to follow. OSM also only has one export format which is GeoJSON. Switching to GrassHopper within OSM did actually help choose the correct route, but then I found OpenRouteService. ORS has quite a few more options for adding and moving waypoints which allows you to more precisely plan your route. It also have 5 different export options including Standard GPX which I wanted. It allows a maximum speed to be set too, but sadly the minimum is 80km/h where I'd prefer to have set it to 50km/h for the route I was taking (still I can just mentally adjust the time). Interestingly too, you can deploy it yourself using Docker, with a Docker Compose file. Once you can your route, you can import that into any other navigation app, and use that in your vehicle. See #technology #opensource #navigation #openstreetmap image
Proton's New AI Assistant Lumo Offers a Private and Encrypted Chat Alternative On the plus side (not the Plus plan) this is an AI assistant that promises to keep your conversations completely private, even for the free version. "Proton says Lumo doesn't keep chat logs on its servers, and everything stays encrypted on your device using the same technology that protects the company's other services, so no one else can read your conversations – including Proton itself." On the not so Plus side, there is a Plus version, but it appears that Proton "Unlimited" plan subscribers, like myself, are limited to the free version only. Which is OK, but it may be time to reconsider that naming of that plan as it is getting further and further away from "unlimited". Some quick comparisons by running through some queries I already did in Perplexity is leaving me with a feeling that it is not as intuitive as Perplexy in terms of interpreting my actual question, and the answers are a bit more vague versus Perplexity's. It does however also provide sources for its answers (not all though). And of course a Proton subscriber, I don't get anything extra on the AI. So, I'm a little mixed on this one, but I suppose its privacy first focus may be plus for many. See #technology #AI #privacy