Mopidy has a dlna plugin: https://mopidy.com/ext/dleyna/
I use this container for mopidy: https://hub.docker.com/r/ivdata/mopidy
Mopidy has a dlna plugin: https://mopidy.com/ext/dleyna/
I use this container for mopidy: https://hub.docker.com/r/ivdata/mopidy
I store it in mariadb
Not self hosted, but I use Windy for general weather predictions, it has some graphs if you click on a city.
If you love graphs meteo.pl has some nice graphs, but they are static, and only for Poland and neighbouring countries. Click meteogram on the top left and zoom in, than click on a red dot. E.g. this is for this week for Warsaw:
https://www.meteo.pl/um/metco/mgram_pict.php?ntype=0u&fdate=2025071006&row=404&col=250&lang=en (I can’t embed this image on lemmy)
Have you checked grafana? Here is a related tutorial: https://ibug.io/blog/2024/01/weather-forecast-with-grafana/
There is a history dashboard where you can change the date and which sensors you want to display: https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/history/ You don’t zoom but you have to add dates, same 2 sensors look like this there:
But it depends on the sensor if it supports this long term statistics, by default all data is saved only for 10 days, you can change these settings.
If filtering and zooming is the most important aspect for you this may be not the best solution, as this graph displays are not the best. The most powerful feature is that you can add local data sources.
I already use HomeAssistant and it has a nice graph interface, you can add any data you want. Plus I have a zigbee temp and humidity sensor on the balcony, so I can add local data to the one coming from external sources. E.g. here is a temperature graph, blue is the temperature from OpenWeatherMap, yellow is an indoor sensor, my outdoor sensor’s battery died again… It shows daily mean, min and max for the last 30 days:
You can find built in weather integrations here: https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/?cat=weather
About this graph card on the ui: https://www.home-assistant.io/dashboards/history-graph/
I already use HomeAssistant and it has a nice graph interface, you can add any data you want. Plus I have a zigbee temp and humidity sensor on the balcony, so I can add local data to the one coming from external sources. E.g. here is a temperature graph, blue is the temperature from OpenWeatherMap, yellow is an indoor sensor. It shows daily mean, min and max for the last 30 days:
You can find built in weather integrations here: https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/?cat=weather
You cannot follow everything from everything.
#idm
there, you will see posts from [email protected]If you want to follow all from one account with a Lemmy-like interface, the closest you can get is with Mbin. There you can follow Lemmy communities, Mastodon and Lemmy users. You cannot follow Mastodon hashtags though.
Wikipedia has a good article on them: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banker_horse
The mistery is they don’t know which European ship brought them there and when. There are multiple options.
Instance independent link: [email protected]
Share links to communities this way, so everyone can subscribe easily.
You should also post about this in [email protected] and [email protected] for better discoverability!
Very nice project! Thank you for using OpenStreetMap! I love it when the project I contribute to gets used in interesting projects like this!
But some quick notes, related to the map display: It’s called OpenStreetMap, there is no s at the end, written in CamelCase without spaces. The other more important problem is you forgot to include the attribution text on the map. For using OSM there is only one requirement, you have to display “© OpenStreetMap” somewhere on a corner of the map. More info about this on the website of the OSM foundation: https://osmfoundation.org/wiki/Licence/Attribution_Guidelines
I see the attribution text is displayed on http://trails.tchncs.de/ but not on https://demo.wanderer.to/ so I don’t know what’s going on.
The basemap display on the demo website uses the tile server from openstreeetmap.org. This is very discouraged, and also can give bad experience to users. The tiles on osm.org are raster tiles, they are regenerated automatically after a change in the map data, they are aimed as a tool for map contributors, not end users. You can read more about this here: https://operations.osmfoundation.org/policies/tiles/
There is a new totally free maplibre compatible vector tile provider, which uses the same map data, I recommend to switch to OpenFreeMap. Users can also self host OpenFreeMap, so some really privacy minded users could totally self host the full project this way.
It seems you are missing some very basic knowledge, if you have questions like this. Watch/read some tutorials to get the basics, than ask specific questions.
This guy does the same thing as you: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yLduQiQXorc
This was like the 3rd result for searching for nginxproxymanager on yt.
You type the ip of the rpi on the router, so from an external call the router will forward it to the rpi. Or I don’t know what is your question.
Things may seem automagical in the networking scene, but you can config anything the way you want. Even in nginxproxymanager you can edit the underlying actual nginx configs with their full power. The automagic is just the default setting.
External 80 to internal 80 and external 443 to internal 443
With this config you don’t have to deal with ports later, as http is 80, https is 443 by default.
If you run some container on port 81, you have to deal with that in the reverse proxy, not in the router. E.g. redirect something.domian.tld to 192.168.0.103:81
If you use docker check out nginxproxymanager, it has a very beginner friendly admin webui. You shouldn’t forward the admin ui’s port, you need to access it only from your lan.
Install docker, grab the official docker compose file, then docker compose up -d
.
Details: Look up how to install docker on elementary (I guess it’s sudo apt install docker
), than you don’t have to care about the distro after that, docker works the same way everywhere. You can find countless tutorials on this, and they should work
Are you trying to install jellyfin server or client?
Elementary 8 circe is based on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS, which is based in debian 13, which has a codename “trixie”.
Nothing special, that’s how urls with unicode, non ascii chatacters look like. It’s called punycode, more info: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internationalized_domain_name
Emoji domains work the same, e.g. ❤️🍺.ws is the same as http://❤🍺.ws/
[email protected] merged with the existing [email protected]
How do you syncronize it between multiple devices and operating systems?