I've been on Mac for around 10 years and the price of the hardware was a huge motivator. The 13" Framework came out and I jumped on that modular bandwagon. I do still use my Mac as a video ripping station but otherwise I earn all my money as a dev on Fedora 40 and have a secondary tablet with NixOS on it, because the draw of an easily reproducible system is strong.
Now Apple just continues to do stupid shit and I just want to own my computer without them looking over my shoulder and charging me a huge price to do it.
I do need to upgrade the Framework (started with the cheap i5 chip) to the fastest AMD variant available so that streaming works better without the fan spinning up, or just build a desktop for streaming and video work.
Lovely first ride on the Zipp 303 s wheels I got this week. They roll fast and don’t feel harsh.
I'm trying to build my first nix package out of the Kana project. My `default.nix' file is below.
When I try to build the application nix tries to fetch https://github.com/ChrisWiegman/kana-cli/archive/v0.10.1.tar.gz
which gives a 404. How do I get nix to download the release .tar.gz
file to build the application?
``` { lib , buildGoModule , fetchFromGitHub , makeWrapper , go }:
buildGoModule rec { pname = "kana-cli"; version = "0.10.1";
src = fetchFromGitHub { owner = "ChrisWiegman"; repo = "kana-cli"; rev = "v${version}"; hash = ""; };
vendorSha256 = null;
This is required for wrapProgram.
allowGoReference = true;
nativeBuildInputs = [ makeWrapper ];
postFixup = '' wrapProgram $out/bin/kana-cli --prefix PATH : ${lib.makeBinPath [ go ]} '';
meta = with lib; { homepage = "https://github.com/ChrisWiegman/kana-cli"; description = "WordPress Stuff"; license = licenses.gpl3; maintainers = with maintainers; [ curtismchale ]; }; } ```
I'm happy with Obsidian for taking my notes but I want to find something I can host myself to track web articles, pdfs, mp3 files that I reference as research. I suppose I'm looking for a replacement for DEVONthink or Zotero.
I have a Synology to run stuff on so solutions that run there are a preference, though not required.
CTRL - P to get to all the available commands in Obsidian.
Given the open format of Obsidian I'm not really that concerned about the fact that it's not open source. It's just markdown files I can do whatever I want with in the future.