Actually useful bot idea where it transcribes the video and posts it as a comment.
Actually useful bot idea where it transcribes the video and posts it as a comment.
Tdarr can do this via its workflows. IIRC, there’s a plugin that will look up the default language and let you configure what to keep. For example, keep native language and your language but discard the others. This works for both audio tracks and subtitles.
This appears to be a report from their mail server and is because of the rua
field that you received it. By setting it to reject
, you’re telling them to not accept any email from someone that is spoofing your domain. I think the only other field you’d want to set is pct
as it specifies what percentage of email this rule should apply.
What might be interesting would be to have it displayed, but grouped by instance. That way we could see some data and potentially uncover troll instances or attempts to brigade the conversation without opening ourselves up to personal attacks.
Wow, no need to make this personal. /s
Ah, I was hoping for something native as I access it from multiple devices. Thanks though, I’ll check it out!
What theme is that? I’ve tried a few but they never look that good.
You could run Firefox in a container attached to the VPN for browsing. You could then connect to it from your workstation over your LAN.
I tried that once. They never watched the show and didn’t give back the USB. 🙁
Plants and animals don’t file tickets.
There’s also Strata, Niri, and to some extent Cosmic. My problem has been that they tend to be very opinionated and limited in the customization of the layouts. Having used XMonad for a long time, I may be a bit spoiled in that regard…
I do think there’s a middle ground for configuration without requiring programming skills, which can be off-putting for many users. After all, most layouts are just a combination of rows and columns. 😛
I actually started working on one a few weeks ago. It’s amazing how easy it was to get the basics working. Still a long way to go, but it’s a fun project in the meantime and hopefully can result in something that supports my desired flow.
In a similar vein, I’ve seen a lot of auto moderator implementations created. If instead of creating yet another project, people started contributing to existing ones we’d have a good core set of functionality that could be shared across instances. Competing implementations are fine, but at some point the efforts get spread so thin that progress is limited.
Each service is a separate docker-compose.yml
, but they are more-or-less the same as the example configs provided by each service. I did it this way as opposed to a single file to make it easier to add/remove services following this pattern.
I do have a higher quality version of the diagram, but had to downsize it a lot to get pictrs to accept it…
Looks like there’s already one: [email protected]