techconsulnerd

joined 2 years ago
[–] techconsulnerd@programming.dev 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

If you already an expert in python, you can keep doing that and build a frontend in python using Dash. They have bootstrap components and mantine (React) components for options of style you might prefer. Don't need to write JS or HTML. It's enterprise grade and widely used by large enterprise projects.

Another is Reflex but their open source version is tricky to run in production. They promote more of their cloud version or enterprise license.

[–] techconsulnerd@programming.dev 3 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Seems like a promising concept as real alternative to Google/Bing.

Initially I couldn't figure out how to spell it and this doesn't help to grow the branding. Apparently it's pronounced "mumble", so I recommend they just renamed it to mumble for better brand recognition. It's way easier to spread the word.

[–] techconsulnerd@programming.dev 5 points 11 months ago (1 children)

There's Safe Dot that also notify if an app is using location and camera, besides microphone. It's available on F-droid and Play Store.

https://github.com/kamaravichow/safe-dot-android

 

With so much note taking apps nowadays, I can't understand why does anyone still write notes with pen and paper. You need to bring the notepad, book or that paper to retrieve that information, and most of the time you don't have it in hand. While my phone almost always reachable and you carry when you go out. For those still like to do handwriting, there's many app does that and they can even convert it to text notes.

So, if you still write notes with pen and paper, why?

 

Lemmy devs, please share if you built any tool that backup a single user's Lemmy account, settings, subscriptions - then can migrate or restore the account as new into other instance. This tool will be used by the user themselves, not by the instance admin.

Can we migrate a user's post and comments to another instance? Maybe like a bulk posting as new posts.

I think if you can troubleshoot your own built PC, that's pretty much a tech person, even though you can't code.

 

I think most all of us here on Lemmy are people with technical background. Most of my professional contacts remained using Reddit, Twitter and even excited when Threads launched.

If you are non-tech background, please comment and share what you do for life.

If you have tech background, upvote this to help promote this post so that we can find more non-tech users on Lemmy.