abeorch

joined 1 year ago
[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 days ago

Many Open source alternatives exist already such as vTiger and CiviCRM.

For my two cents worth I think they could do well by integrating with Nextcloud and Drupal or WordPress (Or whatever comes out of its current shambles).

From the article it seems like they are creating a extendible object model which in some ways is similar to what SharePoint has with its lists. Nextcloud has an add-on (Tables) that is a proto version of this. CiviCRM has worked to integrate website data collection from Drupal / Wordpress well.

Thinking from front of house (website) to back of house (CRM) then Nextcloud the missing link is to Nextcloud ( So documents and images can flow forward into the website Media Library ) and the extensible object model for data.amd being able to link unstructured data (documents etc. to structured data. (Not an expert on CiviCRM so not sure how flexible it is. )

But good on them for having a go. Let many flowers bloom. Even if it doesn't take off some of their ideas might get adopted by someone else in some other way.

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Wow this is cool. Do you use OpenWrt at all? It would be amazing to integrate with its DYNDns package.

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago

Yup. I got yunohost.org running on a free instance on Oracle cloud (using a PaYG account) but costing nothing. - Ive then spun up an Email, Frendica server (limited to users on my domain) and Takahe to try out ActivityPub.

I think that a killer app for activityPub would be if MSFT or Google offered it as a service on Workplace / Office365 . (I mean Id rather not use either of them myself)

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 days ago (2 children)

If you know nothing about hosting your own instance why not start learning? Try something slike running Yunohost.org on a VPS and start running Friendica, GotoSocia, Takahe or even ActivityPub on a Wordpress website to get some experience.

If you aren't technical then you shouldn't try to make technical arguments but get your academic team to talk to your IT team about the reasons why you want an ActivityPub solution and let them figure out the technical questions.

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 0 points 4 days ago

So an update on this. I have started looking at yunohost.org because it standardises the installation and maintenance of a variety of common apps - HomeAssistant, LDAP, email server, mqtt, Nextcloud. i recently saw a post on Reddit about succession planning which reminded me about my own questions.

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 32 points 1 week ago

Id much prefer people just posted on Lemmy.

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 4 points 2 weeks ago

Im just new with yunohost.org but it does seem to make installing applications very simple. Users, email, reverse proxy.

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (1 children)

And I learn something every day. ;-)

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago

Aim on Day 1 of yunohost. Running on a VPS Today but planning on moving it to a local server when I get my OpenWrt routing sorted out .

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 4 points 3 weeks ago

So this is 100% a really common situation. I don't know any of my friends that aren't hovering at about 96% of their gmail capacity and don't want to pay. In fact that's me today. Hence I've been looking around at self hosted alternatives and had previously looked at extracting my emails from Google and loading them in from local storage into Thunderbird - However I was playing around with Yunohost today and randomly uncovered this page - https://yunohost.org/es/email_migration I'm not sure how relevant it is but points to potentially some approaches. I can't vouch for them but I'd love to hear from anyone who has used imapsync or larch

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I'm on day one of Yunohost after months of trying to work out how to approach hosting things like Nextcloud and struggling through bare metal installations, trying to slowly get my head around Docker. Its like suddenly seeing the light .. I mean I really didn't think I would almost have an email server running today. (Its this a dangerous thing?)

[–] abeorch@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 weeks ago

I have a friend that uses the Go Cardless for importing data into FireFlyIII for several months now (May at least six) https://docs.firefly-iii.org/tutorials/data-importer/gocardless/ - Happy to put you in touch if you want to talk to them. - I'd actually like to find a UK Credit Union that would support data import for Selfhosted people. I think there would a really good fit. I'm also on day one of using YunoHost to spin up self hosted applications (Today on a VPS tomorrow on my local RaspberryPi ) I might fire up an instance of Actual.

I'd love to know how many people use Actual / Firefly to demonstrate that there would be interest for a Credit Union to look at offering such a service.

 

I am thinking that this might be a bit over the top but Im interested if anyone uses the tools and recipes designed by coopcloud to deploy their self hosted applications.

 

Im sure this has been asked before i juat can't find where it has been - Maybe need to work on how to search Lemmy better. But...

Id like to eventually self host some sevices that require external access. While I have IpV6 addresses my IPV4 is dynamic.

Whats the best free way to be able to point some domains/ subdomains I have to my external dynamic IP and keep it updated. Im running OpenWrt on my router. - So possibly should be posting there.

Free Dyndns services seem to be a bit crap. Do I need to pay for a VPS? (seems to defeat the point of self hosting)

 

Just a bit or a wandering mind on my part but one of the issues in the back of my mind is what happens to whatever self hosting I setup if something happens to me.

Ideally I'd like to be able to know that in case of emergency Id be able rely on a good friend or two to keep things going.

My thought was that would require some common design patterns/ processes and standardisation.

I also have these thoughts because eventually Id like to support other family members with self hosted services at their places. Standardising hardware, configurations etc makes that much simpler.

How have others approached this?

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