![](https://midwest.social/pictrs/image/05e5fb55-23dc-4b5c-a7db-1bb3d50e1baf.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8286e071-7449-4413-a084-1eb5242e2cf4.png)
Thats what really kicked me into using obsidian as much as I do.
Thats what really kicked me into using obsidian as much as I do.
Basically you can mirror the instapapered versions of your saved pages as markdown files in your obsidian vault. You can customize the whole thing basically so you can put it wherever and have it tie in to your PKM system however you want. I’ve got mine organized in weekly folders with a dataview block in my daily note showing the articles I’ve saved that day.
I’m just curious as to how you think these are insurmountable problems while every instance in existence today is already managing to navigate these issues.
The only thing the author is suggesting is to pool the resources that are going to waste copying media posts around the fediverse into a new backend (that means it’s not directly user accessible and presumably subject to the same restrictions as posts right now) so that the cost of media hosting is more distributed between all the fediverse instances instead of having the big ones hogging all the bandwidth of the small ones with memes because some users decided to subscribe to a community on say Lemmy.world.
Did you even read the article? It’s not like all the users just get unrestricted access to storage to treat like a google drive, this is a backend thing. This guy is trying to find a solution to all the wasted bandwidth and storage space from sending copies to all the other instances they’re federated with, which is a legimate issue that the instance admins are already dealing with on a daily basis. This will let them pool resources to help lower costs for smaller instances.
As to the CSAM thing I can only imagine it would be easier for one instance to purge fifty images/restore from a backup and everyone else just have to redo their thumbnails as opposed to all the instances having to purge and restore but that’s just me.
Literally just set one up yesterday on neocities, it was surprisingly easy. Of course then I managed to break it because I’m not as familiar with git as I’d like to be lol.
I would also like to know this, best I could come up with was one of those electric water cooler pumps that fit over the top of the bottle.
Well of course not, ever since they got that deal with Uncle Sam they knew they could do anything up to Steve Ballmer kicking a secret service agent in the nuts and stealing the Football. Maybe even including that, won’t know until it happens lol.
No problem! I’ve been puttering around trying to figure this out and this post gave me the push I needed lol
Have you tried going into the setting for the feed itself and using the CSS selector filters? You might be able to cut out the extraneous bits using that.
It looks like it’s being used for cooling in some areas and static control in others.
Oof, that’s what killed my V1 setup lol
They couldn’t effectively serve ads through it lol
I did just check to see if you can pass along wildcards in an automation, which you can! I used this automation:
alias: sentence test
description:
trigger:
- platform: conversation
command:
- When is [my] {date}
condition: []
action:
- set_conversation_response: curses, that damnable {{ trigger.slots.game }}
enabled: false
- choose:
- conditions:
- condition: template
value_template: '{{ ''birthday'' in trigger.slots.date }}'
sequence:
- set_conversation_response: >-
curses, that damnable {{ trigger.slots.date }}! It completely
slipped my mind
- conditions:
- condition: template
value_template: '{{ ''christmas'' in trigger.slots.date }}'
sequence:
- set_conversation_response: sir you know when {{ trigger.slots.date }} is!
This should give you a framework to build off of. It looks like when you don’t define a list of slots in an intent it just passes the wildcard along in a slot.
I can think of a couple ways you could have it be one automation, the first is you’d have multiple triggers with different ids and use the choose action to select the response based on the trigger id.
The other way that I’m a bit less sure about is passing the name of the input_date helper through to the response with a wildcard. You’d probably have to set the {{ trigger.slot.event }} as a variable and match that to an alias or an entity_id.
So I found this which might help. I tried defining my own intent scripts too, but it was too much of a PITA, I ended up using automations instead.
Not out yet unfortunately.
EDIT: I lied, link is here. There’s no releases as of yet.
Yeah I use bitwarden and it was pretty panless. My only issue was on github the addon didn’t pick up on the passkey initially, had to make a new one.
I’m trying to find that out myself, just started playing with it yesterday. Right now I’ve got a personal store of recipes in CopyMeThat, and that’s got some nice features like meal planning and shopping lists but its not integrated into anything.
I’ve seen a few approaches so far, some guy on the forums has all the ingredients stored in the front matter and uses dataviewjs to display them in the note which allows for unit conversion but I think that’s too much, I still want to be able to read them without obsidian.
Right now I’ve got tags and method and ingredients in the front matter along with checklist add-on formatted tasks in the main part of the note. Eventually I want to have it pull a recipe at random and put it in my weekly note or something.
I’ve been using copymethat but I’m trying to move to obsidian.
Cobalt.tools worked flawlessly!
EDIT: Ope, thought you were asking lol. Cobalt.tools rocks!