@lemmy.world
Clippy made sense, was very likeable, and I enjoyed interacting with it as a child.
This featureless blob I find rather disgusting. A pure depiction of an era we live in, where the market thinks it's good enough to spew out "something" to cater the customers, and have the audacity to ask hard earned money for it.
I keep track of lots of vintage devices in my basement, these lay on a CD shelf with narrow walls, and I want to keep track of their maintenance status, i.e. when did I charge the battery last time.
This little printer is pretty handy for labeling tasks, with one noticeable problem: the resolution is quite low, so I cannot afford printing full length domain name on such a tiny label. What I ended up with is writing my own microservice that puts fake http://i.nv/ domain in front of inventory ID. That domain is provided by DNSMASQ that I run on my server, and there's also NGINX listening for that domain and doing 302 onto an actual Homebox page.
Homebox sends URL parameters to the specified endpoint, and given that information it is possible to construct any label of any shape or form, it only needs to be a PNG image.
What's currently running on mine:
Gadgetbridge allows automatic SQLite database export to the location you specify.
Navigate to Settings -> Automations -> Auto export database, and from there you can configure the details.
You can put it into a shared Syncthing folder, or something alike, or process it with Termux + Tasker. Personally, I hesitate to send megabytes of data over the wire every couple of minutes, so I rigged up a script that extracts the required metrics (for now its my steps only, the rest does not seem to be accurate) and sends a payload to my queue, where a consumer script later adds it to the DB.
I plan to explore the operating system, it has undergone some heavy design changes from Sony. Currently the device has no battery and it lies on the shelf as a display piece, but later on could film some videos maybe. Just need to gain more confidence talking to camera π
thanks for using Leebra!
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