

I am about to install a second Technitium instance, so this is great timing.
I am:
@clb92@feddit.dk (MAIN LEMMY PROFILE)
@clb92@mastodon.social (Main Mastodon profile)
@clb92@kbin.social
@clb92@lemmy.world
@clb92@lemmy.ml
And /u/clb92 on Reddit (and many other places)


I am about to install a second Technitium instance, so this is great timing.
I’m out of luck, it seems, since I’m already running Gitea 1.24.6.
The longer you wait the more incompatible and harder to migrate it will get.
I know, but I thought it was already too late to simply change the docker image and be done with it. But, you are saying it’s still just a drop-in replacement currently?
I meant it more like “I’m concerned if I’m missing out on something huge by still using Gitea.”
But if they’re still mostly the same, I’ll just stick with what I’ve already set up.
Does Forgejo have any killer features or something that makes it worthwhile for me to switch away from Gitea now?
I’ve tried it out now too, and it looks promising.
I didn’t like it, as it didn’t have the exact full article view mode I desired, but lots of people like it.
The loss of Google Reader is basically what taught me not to get too attached to services I can’t host myself. I’m hosting an older version of TT-RSS (due to migration issues to newer versions), and will continue with that until it no longer works for me, and then I will probably move on to CommaFeed. I’ve already tested all the commonly self hosted RSS readers out there, and that’s the one that fits my needs best, other than TT-RSS.


i’ve never had noticeable lag
I think you misread ‘nagging’ as ‘lagging’ in my comment


Yeah, the branding is definitely ‘meh’ at best, but even worse, in my opinion, is the tight integration with the whole Muse ecosystem and MuseHub thing (and the default download on the website being the MuseHub-based installer too) and built-in cloud storage crap. It just feels wrong to have an open source application integrated so tightly into all their proprietary services all the way through. Just installed the latest version 3.7.5, and I was surprised at how much nagging there was, on both the website and in the application itself.
But other than the whole Muse stuff, Audacity 4.0 looks really awesome in terms of UI and UX. And at least there is a non-MuseHub installer and you can choose not to use their other stuff, and say no to the telemetry…
It’s currently my backup comms plan for my wife, as fell as a few friends and family
What kind of range are you getting between you? I assume lots of people are using it in your general area then?
Yeah, but organized into as many threads as there are issues/PRs, so it’s exactly as daunting as the same list as viewed on GitHub/project/issues (because it is exactly the same content).
Surely, dedicated tools for managing/tracking issues give you better tools for triaging, filtering, planning and such, compared to a mail client…
Awesome and detailed explanation, thanks. I figured they’d be juggling a lot of mails, and I guess it is possible for some people to stay on top of that and keep it all organized with a good mail client, but still… I would get lost so quickly.
Thanks again!
I’m probably gonna sound like a noob now, but how does one even properly handle issue tracking, working like that?
What did they use before? GitLab? A hosted solution like GitHub or Codeberg?
Works great for me, thanks.
Added a button on my Stream Deck too, which disables blocking on my two Technitium instances for 5 minutes.
I have it integrated into HomeAssistant so I have a “Disable DNS Blocking” button
I need that. I already have a bunch of physical buttons on my desk, which do things via Home Assistant, so that’d be an obvious one for me to add next.
Source for that claim? Because vulnerable does not mean infected.
Also, I’m kinda glad my instance has been offline for a while now because of database trouble. That was lucky.