Goofed Home

Dawarich 1.0

$$6636
https://lemmy.world/u/frey posted on Mar 3, 2026 14:01

Hello there, good people of lemmy world! It was my mistake to never post Dawarich updates here before and I’m here to fix it! I hope you’ll find it interesting and useful.

In case you don’t know what Dawarich is, it’s your favorite free open-source self-hostable alternative to Google Timeline and your memory’s best friend.

Github: https://github.com/Freika/dawarich

Website: https://dawarich.app/

Last 12 months of my movements across Europe (Germany and Norway mostly haha

Oh well, what a journey. It all started as a simple CRUD app with an endpoint to accept data from the Owntracks app for iOS. The first versions didn’t even have authentication! Why bother, thought I, if I’m the only user. And look at us now.

What do we have now

So, let’s have a look at our current set of features, shall we?

As of today, we have: - Location tracking - Via Dawarich for iOS and Android (yeah we have the Android app now!) - Via GPSLogger, Overland, OwnTracks, Homeassistant, PhoneTrack, Colota and whatnot - Location visualization - On a flat surface or on a globe - As points, routes, heatmap, fog of war - As extra layers, such as scratch map - Visits, areas and places - Can be created manually or detected and suggested automatically - Tags for places, including privacy settings (hide my location history in X meters around a place that have a tag with privacy settings assigned) - Family - With full privacy and location sharing only on consent - Map tools - Places, visits and areas creation - Area selection tool (to show visits and manage points in selected area) - Transportation modes - Replay tool (oh I love it, gonna tell a bit more about it below) - Map search: enter place name or address to see when you visited it - Trips - Utilizing photos integration to show photos along the trip route - Stats - Total distance, points, countries and cities - Per-year and per-month distance traveled charts - Insights - Per-year distance traveled - Traveling heatmap - Countries and cities visited - Days traveled - Year-to-year comparison - Monthly insights - Activity breakdown (stationary vs driving vs walking etc.) - Top visited locations - “When do you travel” patterns - Imports and exports - Almost a dozen of supported file formats to import - Export to GPX, GeoJSON and full user account export

Huh, that’s pretty much it, right? I mean, what a progress. All thanks to you and your support guys.

The Android app release

At the beginning of this year we’ve finally released our own Android app: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.zeitflow.dawarich

It’s, of course, still rough around the edges, but I see it as a huge win and an opportunity to do more exciting stuff on the mobiles. The main focus, of course, is the tracking quality, and I think with the most recent release we got there and it works pretty stable now, but what do I know, I only yesterday ordered an android phone for internal tests! :D But seriously, please do share your feedback, it’s crucial for the quality of our apps. Once again — thank you.

By the way, we also have an unofficial android app built by sunstep, a member of Dawarich community: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.sunstep.dawarich. Check it out as well, he put tremendous amount of work into it. The mobile shift

We’re working on moving the iOS app to the same codebase, as the Android one, so they would effectively share the same UI layer, while keeping native location tracking mechanisms for both platform under the hood. This means that the iOS app will rather soon be updated and both apps will have a green light to receive new features.

This is important, because we want our apps to able to do more. Dawarich started with the idea to bring convenience of the big screen back when Google killed the web-based Timeline, but hey, it’s 2026 and people are running around with phones in their pockets for what, 15 years now? Or more, I didn’t check that, but the idea is that web is awesome, but it’s also very convenient to be able to quickly check your data on your smaller screen while commuting or otherwise not having access to the bigger screen. That’s why we want to bring more viewing functionality to our apps. Trips, stats, insights (they are already there in the Android app by the way) and more.

And, just to make it clear: all 3rd party mobile clients currently supported will be also supported in the future. We have no plans enforcing our users to switch to our official apps. The choice belongs to you. The Replay

Remember I mentioned a replay tool in the feature list? Well, check this out:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_XiG5Kcevr4

sounds of excitement

I initially called it “Timeline” but the actual Timeline was introduced a few days later, so I renamed it to what it is — the Replay button. Love it.

Supporters Badge

More than a hundred people (I think the number is now closer to two hundreds) supported and keep supporting us financially during these two years, and as a small token of appreciation, we’d like to offer a nice shiny Supported Badge that will be shown in your Dawarich UI, see the screenshot.

It glows and changes its colors!

It’s an optional thing, that can be enabled in Settings -> General -> Supporter Status form. Just enter the email you used to sign in on a platform you supported us through (GitHub Sponsors / Ko-Fi / Patreon), and if it’s in our supporters list, you’ll receive this nice shiny badge. It can be disabled though, in case you don’t like it. No pressure.

The webhooks from GitHub are currently a bit broken, so if you donated via Github Sponsors and verification didn’t work for you, feel free to reach me directly and I’ll add you to the supporters list manually.

What’s next

We already have some new features in progress, so more good stuff is coming. One particular thing I’m super excited about, but I’ll keep it a secret for now. Just wanted to heat up the excitement a bit :D

Aside from the plans for mobile, I’m working on improvements for trips, visits & places (which are begging for an UI/UX rework) and some stuff will be introduced in order to reduce the database sizes of your self-hosted instances. Keep an eye on the releases, it’s all there.

You, the people

Once again, I want to say thank you to all of you: for reading my posts, for installing Dawarich and trying it out, for providing feedback, for creating issues with thorough bug reports on GitHub, for testing our Android app during the beta period, for being part of our Discord community. Thank you to all of our contributors: we have a few PRs with meaningful contributions opened and some already merged, one of them reduced time of our docker images build from ~70 mins to roughly 25 mins. We have a lot of low-hanging fruits waiting to be fixed in our code, simply because I don’t always have time to address all the known issues. Don’t hesitate to dive in and open a PR if you feel like you can improve something in Dawarich.

To save you a scroll, as always, the links one more time:

Github: https://github.com/Freika/dawarich

Website: https://dawarich.app/

The work continues, and there will be more, better and faster.

~ Evgenii from Dawarich—

https://lemmy.world/post/43805343

$$7075
https://sh.itjust.works/u/napkin2020 posted on Mar 4, 2026 15:59
In reply to: https://lemmy.world/post/43805343

Truely amazing. If only there is an app that won’t completely deain 69% of bayyery in 3 seconds on Android.

https://sh.itjust.works/comment/24101823
$$7124
https://lemmy.zip/u/paperd posted on Mar 4, 2026 17:55
In reply to: https://lemmy.world/post/43805343

Please get the app into f-droid.

Also this is packaged for NixOS, yay!

https://lemmy.zip/comment/25032349

Is there any way to clean up access logs for statistics purposes?

$$6622
https://jlai.lu/u/hylobates posted on Mar 3, 2026 13:08

Hi everyone,

I’m currently selfhosting a website that has quite an audience (~2 000 unique visitors/day) and I’m trying to measure that audience more precisely.

I just want to have a simple report of the most viewed pages, the most popular browser, etc… very very basic stuff.

I want to avoid client-side solution as they can and will very easily be blocked and render my effort completely useless. I had a Matomo until 2023 that registered less than half the visits when compared to my access logs.

I tried to look into GoAccess but it gathers a lot (and I mean A LOOOOOT) of chinese/indian/russian bots which are pretty difficult to filter out (if you have a method, please share it, I’m very curious!).

Is there any way you’re aware of to have decent stats without invading the privacy of my visitors or counting bots?

https://jlai.lu/post/33978623

$$6880
https://lemmy.world/u/irmadlad posted on Mar 4, 2026 02:13
In reply to: https://jlai.lu/post/33978623

I’m currently selfhosting a website that has quite an audience (~2 000 unique visitors/day)

That’s something to crow about. Congrats on the site’s success.

https://lemmy.world/comment/22463672
$$7444
https://sh.itjust.works/u/fruitycoder posted on Mar 5, 2026 21:12
In reply to: https://lemmy.world/comment/22450770

I guess the project was abandoned but supposdly spirtually succeed by https://github.com/matomo-org/?footer

https://sh.itjust.works/comment/24127279

Selfhosted News Feed

$$6279
https://programming.dev/u/kivarada posted on Mar 2, 2026 16:33

I have created a tech content platform with thousands of tech feeds from individual bloggers, open source projects and enterprises.

The content is organised into spaces. In the Selfhosted space, you can find the latest articles about selfhosted apps. In each space you can control the filtering with a threshold parameter.

There is also an RSS feed that you can subscribe to: https://insidestack.it/spaces/selfhosted/rss

https://programming.dev/post/46580811

$$6690
https://programming.dev/u/kivarada posted on Mar 3, 2026 15:28
In reply to: https://lemmy.zip/comment/25004125

Really? Have not noticed anything, but will check metrics at home… And thanks!

https://programming.dev/comment/22502450
$$6691
https://lemmy.zip/u/Vaggumon posted on Mar 3, 2026 15:32
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22502450

Looks like it’s back up, may have been a temp issue.

https://lemmy.zip/comment/25004639

Tailscale n00b questions

$$6239
https://reddthat.com/u/mrnobody posted on Mar 2, 2026 14:52

Playing around with a new self-host NAS OS, finally thought about Tailscale. But, I see it wants a login to an account. Checking online, seems I have to use Google, Apple, MS, Github or OIDC (which iassume costs money based on the site).

So how tf y’all setting to your tail scale stuff? I’m not using a big brother us tech account for auth on this thing. Think I’d rather go back to regular wireguard if that’s the case.

https://reddthat.com/post/61205620

$$7210
https://corndog.social/u/Toribor posted on Mar 5, 2026 01:42
In reply to: https://lemmy.sdf.org/comment/26352467

I avoided tailscale for so long because I was already using wireguard and I didn’t know you could self-host with headscale. But once I started using it with headscale the mesh design really is a big improvement to usability. I don’t miss having to carefully manage my config files and ip route rules.

I need to get setup with app connectors and then I think it’ll finally be a high enough wife-usability factor for me to remove some things I still have exposed over the internet.

https://corndog.social/comment/5432653
$$7237
https://lemmy.world/u/irmadlad posted on Mar 5, 2026 03:30
In reply to: https://corndog.social/comment/5432613

Thanks for explaining. I really didn’t mean it as a Headscale v Tailscale. kind of thing as far as data security goes. I’ve heard a lot of great things about Headscale. OP was just worried about his data being compromised, and I was just pointing out that it’s pretty tight.

https://lemmy.world/comment/22485249

What us the best way to add remote access to my servers?

$$6148
https://lemmy.world/u/ZeDoTelhado posted on Mar 2, 2026 09:43

Hi,

I an currently trying to add remote access to 2 of my servers but didn’t manage to get a working setup as is.

Right now I want to access 2 servers: * one is for media stuff (navidrome, jellyfin, managing the arr stack) * one is for my data syncing with rsync and after set a backup from borg to another server not on my domain

I was trying at some point to add stuff such as tailscale, but somehow I always had issues with having both servers reachable within the IP range I use on my local network, so everything would work as is with the current config at home being away. I have also heard of cloudflare tunnels as well, but that I didn’t try yet. At some point I tried to do just a regular wireguard from my opnsense, but I would prefer not to have open ports to worry about (and also had issues with internal IP not being assigned from wireguard as well).

Does anyone here has experience with this? If so, what was your solution and/or caviats to it?

https://lemmy.world/post/43757826

$$6905
https://programming.dev/u/clifmo posted on Mar 4, 2026 04:15
In reply to: https://lemmy.ca/comment/22015982

Yup. It gets more involved once you start adding DNS and SSL. But if you’re ok typing IPs and you’re not opening your firewall to the public, it’s all you really need.

https://programming.dev/comment/22515159
$$6929
https://lemmy.zip/u/baner posted on Mar 4, 2026 05:52
In reply to: https://lemmy.world/post/43757826

You should keep trying with tailscale, did you read the docs? (tailscale provides amazing documentation), you dont need to install the client on every device, for that use subnet routers, all is in the docs. Give it another try and post back what issues you are having.

https://lemmy.zip/comment/25020991

New OS on ugreen DH4300

$$6139
https://feddit.org/u/Peluri96 posted on Mar 2, 2026 08:57

Hello everyone,

i am thinking about getting a ugreen DH4300, however I don’t trust the company with their is so I am thinking about installing something like OMV on it. Has anyone here done that to this line of machines? I found no one saying anything about this online.

On another note. Currently I have a raspberry running my services. Would it even worth it to get that ugreen? Or should I just upgraded my pi with some hats or a DAS?

https://feddit.org/post/26531726

$$6200
https://lemmy.decronym.xyz/u/Decronym posted on Mar 2, 2026 12:30
In reply to: https://feddit.org/post/26531726

Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:

Fewer Letters More Letters
SBC Single-Board Computer
SMB Server Message Block protocol for file and printer sharing; Windows-native
SSD Solid State Drive mass storage

[Thread #128 for this comm, first seen 2nd Mar 2026, 12:30] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]

https://lemmy.decronym.xyz/comment/14826
$$6860
https://lemmy.world/u/mastod0n posted on Mar 4, 2026 00:26
In reply to: https://feddit.org/post/26531726

If that helps I just got a Aoostar WTR Pro (Ryzen version) to replace my NAS. But I had 2x 16GB RAM left so that was pretty cheap for a rather powerful home NAS. With 8c/16T abf two 2.5Gb NIC it’s powerful enough to replace a small hypervisor.

BUT careful, while it has quickswap slots the hardware itself doesn’t support it.

https://lemmy.world/comment/22462303

Does anyone have any experience with Sync-in for online files?

$$6055
https://lemmy.today/u/paequ2 posted on Mar 2, 2026 04:48

I still haven’t found a Google Drive replacement. Nextcloud is way too bloated. Seafile is way too complicated to install.

I need multi-user support, so other apps where they just serve a folder from my server don’t really cut it either.

https://lemmy.today/post/48563874

$$7469
https://lemmy.today/u/paequ2 posted on Mar 5, 2026 22:25
In reply to: https://discuss.tchncs.de/comment/24254701

I don’t want to sync files at all. I want files to only be on the server, accessible via web interface. Like Google Drive.

https://lemmy.today/comment/22690782
$$7674
https://discuss.tchncs.de/u/Creat posted on Mar 6, 2026 14:49
In reply to: https://lemmy.today/comment/22690782

Maybe look onto OwnCloud. That’s the project NextCloud was forked from many years ago. It’s very much still around and had a very different philosophy, a much more minimalistic approach with focus on stability. That’s actually the reason the people behind NextCloud had to fork it, cause all their additional features (bloat) wasn’t accepted upstream.

https://discuss.tchncs.de/comment/24351806

Introducing Habitat - A Social Platform for Local Communities

$$5825
https://feddit.uk/u/carlnewton posted on Mar 1, 2026 20:12

I’ve been working on Habitat for the past two years. It all stemmed from this idea that I posted in April 2024.

Habitat is a free open-source, self hosted social platform for local communities. It is aimed at fostering local community discussions and discovery of areas of interest. This is why it is built primarily around location. A Habitat instance centers on a specific area, and the local community can make generic posts about that area, or they can make posts about specific locations in that area. More about what I’ve been building and the future plans here.

Features

  • Habitat specification of location and size - enabling posts related to the local area
  • Home feed - Displays the most recent posts
  • Nearby feed - Displays posts sorted by proximity to the user
  • Create posts - Upload photos, set locations, comments
  • Categories - Location rules
  • Amazon S3 image storage option
  • Personalisation - Overrides Habitat defaults per user: kms/miles, hidden categories
  • Moderation tools - User, post, comment moderation, block email addresses
  • Announcements - Scheduled announcements
  • Public moderation log - Keep moderator actions visible for 30 days

If you’re interest in this at all, please give it a spin and let me know how you get on. I’ll keep an eye here on Lemmy, but you can also post to the Habitat discussion board on GitHub.

https://feddit.uk/post/45160073

$$6878
https://sh.itjust.works/u/Anon518 posted on Mar 4, 2026 02:05
In reply to: https://lemmy.ca/comment/21996401

Did you even understand the problem?

The answer is no, not yes.

https://sh.itjust.works/comment/24091764
$$6997
https://feddit.uk/u/carlnewton posted on Mar 4, 2026 11:37
In reply to: https://jlai.lu/comment/19776376

Thanks for this. Regarding your point on on making people care, I’ve just written up a post that touches on this: https://feddit.uk/post/45292700

Federation is not yet built in, but I have a plan. There are some details here: https://carlnewton.github.io/posts/location-based-social-network/#connecting-instances

https://feddit.uk/comment/23617258

In arr stack how to pick indexers?

$$5680
https://lemmy.zip/u/troubling087 posted on Mar 1, 2026 14:04

I had a small media library for myself, and wanted to automate it a bit more, so implemented arr stack (prowlarr, radarr, lidarr), it seems to work but I’m not sure how to pick indexers. I have no experience with it, and I initially just picked a public one, but it barely ever seems to download something.

I’m a bit confused about it, should i just pick as many as I can? Or join a private one? But no idea where to start there.

Any advice or push in the right direction would be appreciated.

https://lemmy.zip/post/59986445

$$6336
https://reddthat.com/u/howmuch posted on Mar 2, 2026 19:21
In reply to: https://lemmy.zip/post/59986445

Having a few public indexers shouldn’t hurt. However you probably don’t want to add a ton otherwise you will likely end up being overloaded by duplicates.

But really you should invest in getting into private trackers. Even an entry to mid-tier tracker will get you far better and more reliable results than public. Also the content will generally be much better seeded and more reliable.

https://reddthat.com/comment/25110657
$$6391
https://lemmy.world/u/x00z posted on Mar 2, 2026 21:48
In reply to: https://lemmy.zip/post/59986445

I use Prowlarr with Flaresolverr.

Setup the Flaresolverr indexer proxy in Prowlarr: - Tags: flaresolverr - Host: http://flaresolverr:8191/ (or whatever host+port your flaresolv

And then I use these: - 1337x (Add Tags: flaresolverr) - TorrentDownload - Knaben

It’s not the best and Knaben is mostly just TPB + Rutracker. But this setup gets me everything I need. Everything wrong is filtered as I made my setup look for HEVC with specific bit rate ranges. Invalid file extensions are filtered out.

For actual downloading I use RDT Client with the TorBox debrid service.

Sometimes some indexing services time out but I’ll get the content later.

In my experience, with this setup, I really don’t need Usenet or private torrent trackers.

https://lemmy.world/comment/22439685

Ideon: I'm building a self-hosted project cockpit on an infinite canvas (v0.5 update)

$$5661
https://lemmy.world/u/expyth0n posted on Mar 1, 2026 13:24

Hey selfhosters 👋

A few weeks ago I shared Ideon here and got great feedback that shaped a lot of what I’ve been working on since.

Since my last post here, Ideon crossed 200 stars on GitHub and I wanted to say thank you ❤. It means a lot to see people interested in what started as a side project. It motivated me to work on it literally every day since then.

For those who missed it: Ideon is a self-hosted visual workspace where you lay out everything about a project on an infinite canvas: notes, Git repos, code snippets, checklists, sketches, links and connect them together. Two containers, no external dependencies.

Since then, a lot has changed and I wanted to share an update.

Self-hosting got smoother. Docker permission issues with bind mounts are gone, build times are faster, and there’s a new GIT_ALLOWED_HOSTS env variable so you can whitelist your internal Git servers (Gitea, Forgejo, GitLab behind a VPN, etc.) without the SSRF filter blocking them.

Collaboration got real structure. There are now 4 project roles (Creator, Owner, Editor, Viewer), a Request Access workflow for private projects, and the canvas supports real-time multiplayer with conflict-free editing.

The canvas got a lot more usable. Keyboard navigation (arrow keys + vim keys), a command palette, freehand sketch blocks, drag-and-drop checklists with progress bars, markdown tables and task lists, emoji reactions on blocks, edge labels, and a bunch of stability fixes for large projects.

Where this is going next:

Right now Ideon lets you see your project. Git stats, issues, PRs show up on the canvas, but you can only look at them. For the v1 I want to move from visibility to control. Merge a PR from the canvas. Trigger a deployment. Restart a service. Turn the workspace into an actual cockpit where you operate your project, not just view it.

That’s the direction. Curious what this community thinks about it.

If you tried it and hit something rough, or if you’ve been waiting to try it, now’s a good time. Feedback always welcome.

GitHub: https://github.com/3xpyth0n/ideon

Docs: https://www.theideon.com/docs

https://lemmy.world/post/43725501

$$6796
https://programming.dev/u/anzo posted on Mar 3, 2026 20:37
In reply to: https://jlai.lu/comment/19760411

Yes it is.

https://programming.dev/comment/22508227
$$6797
https://programming.dev/u/anzo posted on Mar 3, 2026 20:41
In reply to: https://lemmy.zip/comment/24974062

As OP said, stars correlated with their own posting on Lemmy. So your affirmation is not absolutely true. It’s all relative… same applies to posting on reddit vs. lemmy… There’s a dilemma between popularity vs. a smaller niche population with ethical concerns.

In a similar vein, PRs might be more in quantity but less in quality when comparing any foss project on github vs codeberg…

https://programming.dev/comment/22508307
Create New Post