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Not in Stockholm. The western part of town saw a 19% increase this summer. The central parts had a 16% increase[1]. This I believe has to do with massive investments in infrastructure. Bike lanes have become more crowded, but I must say that it's a joy compared to cramming yourself into an overcrowded subway train.

[1] https://www.stockholmdirekt.se/nyheter/rekordmanga-har-valt-...


> The paperlike hd looks interesting. https://www.amazon.com/Dasung-Ink-Paperlike-13-3-Monitor/dp/....

A blog post featuring that display was discussed yesterday here on HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18100447


> E-Ink Monitors: Ready for Prime Time?

13.3" at $899. I guess that answers the question.



I was a TTRSS user, but it only caused me trouble. Threw all kinds of strange errors at unexpected times. I don't know how many times it died on me after an upgrade.

About 1 ½ ago I switched to FreshRSS and it has been a marvelous experience. Zero trouble, zero adminstrative burden. Self-hosted bliss. Best of all is the fact that it uses a flat file DB so it can easily be backed up, moved around and migrated. Can not recommend it enough. Also, it's PHP, so works on any cheap shared hosting. That's how I use it.


>Best of all is the fact that it uses a flat file DB so it can easily be backed up, moved around and migrated. Can not recommend it enough. Also, it's PHP, so works on any cheap shared hosting. That's how I use it.

I've also been running my own FreshRSS instance for a few years now and this was the deciding factor for me. PHP+SQLite pretty much guarantees that any "toaster connected to the internet" would be able to serve it.

Even now that I'm using a slightly more powerful server, I don't want to run a dedicated Postgres just to store some personal RSS feeds. I know I can put everything on a docker and pretend it's not there, but that's just hiding a detail that's going to bite back when I need to backup my data or change servers.

I wish that more self-hosted applications would support SQLite out of the box.


Use docker compose and mount volumes, move the folder move the service


>> Maybe, but at least Facebook doesn't actively try to manipulate you into believing that they're the "good guys"

> They don't? News to me.

News indeed. Being good IS their mission statement. "Facebook's mission is to give people the power to build community and bring the world closer together."


It would be if I could restrict a container to a certain domain[1]. However, as it functions now, my containers are easily polluted.

[1] https://github.com/mozilla/multi-account-containers/issues/8...


https://getkirby.com/ is nice, but not open-source. https://getgrav.org/ seems similar. https://bolt.cm/ is perhaps not as sparse, but the best flat file CMS I've found (SQLite).


Kirby is really good. I've tried it a few weeks ago for a simple website (for which I would have used Wordpress) and it did the job perfectly. It's fast, efficient, has a great documentation and is really easy to set up. I have nothing bad to say about this.


I can recommend Bolt CMS for its declarative definition of content types and overall simplicity. (It's not limited to SQLite, though.)



Sweden: http://fruktkartan.se/

Fruit on public land.


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