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nikodunk

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Can a $1,500 Battery Replace a Powerwall? [video]

youtube.com
5 points·by nikodunk·قبل 18 يومًا·3 comments

Duranium: A More Reliable PostmarketOS

postmarketos.org
23 points·by nikodunk·قبل 4 أشهر·4 comments

Microsoft brings new "Xbox mode" to Windows 11 PCs next month

windowscentral.com
4 points·by nikodunk·قبل 4 أشهر·0 comments

Pocketblue – Fedora Atomic for mobile devices

github.com
149 points·by nikodunk·قبل 5 أشهر·51 comments

Simple to Ornate and Back Again (2024)

josem.co
10 points·by nikodunk·قبل 6 أشهر·1 comments

Bazzite Fall Update: Fedora 43, Xbox Allies, Legion Go 2, Nvidia GTX

universal-blue.discourse.group
6 points·by nikodunk·قبل 9 أشهر·2 comments

$912 energy independence without red tape

sunboxlabs.com
209 points·by nikodunk·قبل 9 أشهر·163 comments

Bluefin LTS Is Released

docs.projectbluefin.io
92 points·by nikodunk·قبل 10 أشهر·49 comments

Built to Outlast: Designing Products for the Long Haul

pilaenergy.com
4 points·by nikodunk·قبل 10 أشهر·0 comments

Show HN: A budget app so simple it's 1 chart

4keynumbers.com
3 points·by nikodunk·قبل 10 أشهر·0 comments

comments

nikodunk
·قبل 18 يومًا·discuss
The Home Assistant integration mentioned in the video: https://github.com/PilaEnergy/pila-home-assistant

The product: https://pilaenergy.com
nikodunk
·قبل 3 أشهر·discuss
Having read above article, I just gave llama.cpp a shot. It is as easy as the author says now, though definitely not documented quite as well. My quickstart:

brew install llama.cpp

llama-server -hf ggml-org/gemma-4-E4B-it-GGUF --port 8000

Go to localhost:8000 for the Web UI. On Linux it accelerates correctly on my AMD GPU, which Ollama failed to do, though of course everyone's mileage seems to vary on this.
nikodunk
·قبل 5 أشهر·discuss
It's a new-ish project FYI. But to answer your questions:

- Apps: It's Linux (like desktop or server), but "image-based" so you install apps in containers like iOS or Android do (and therefore OS updates basically-never break). https://flathub.org is generally the main app store for Linux containerized phone apps.

- Screenshots: It'll look the same as other Linux-on-phones, so like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PostmarketOS for instance. It's just built differently.
nikodunk
·قبل 5 أشهر·discuss
I'm sure PRs would be welcomed if you have those devices to test on.
nikodunk
·قبل 5 أشهر·discuss
Updating without worries has made it much more daily-drivable for me on a Oneplus 6 (ie. it has rollbacks and image-based updates), despite being so new. It's fun that image-based OSs - which were arguably popularlized by phones - are now coming back to phones on the Linux side too.
nikodunk
·قبل 5 أشهر·discuss
This is based on bootc (bootable containers), so note that the OS build is described in a normal Dockerfile: https://github.com/pocketblue/pocketblue/blob/main/Container... which is then run by the Github action (or locally).

Very similar to how Universal Blue, Bazzite, Bluefin etc. build at https://github.com/ublue-os/bazzite (see their Containerfile), but for mobile.

Has a similar mission to https://postmarketos.org, but with a different build system AFAICT
nikodunk
·قبل 5 أشهر·discuss
I really hope _this_ quote is not fabricated - because what a fantastic quote!!
nikodunk
·قبل 8 أشهر·discuss
https://chrisgiven.com/2025/06/saying-goodbye/
nikodunk
·قبل 8 أشهر·discuss
Fascinating repo, thank you for sharing!
nikodunk
·قبل 8 أشهر·discuss
Hot take from an AI skeptic: between this, Nano Banana and generative AI integrated into Gmail for repetitive emails, I’m starting to actually use Google’s AI for tasks I hate most.

Google appears to have their AI product game together!
nikodunk
·قبل 8 أشهر·discuss
Agreed! It's my default recommendation now for a "just works" Linux system nowadays.

It's also really great for development btw - been doing all of my development on it with Homebrew and Flatpaks for over a year now.
nikodunk
·قبل 9 أشهر·discuss
Boeing?
nikodunk
·قبل 9 أشهر·discuss
If you’re big, invest in this. If you’re small, slap Dokploy/Coolify on it.
nikodunk
·قبل 9 أشهر·discuss
You’d need a bigger kit. WIll Prowse has many guides on these. https://youtube.com/watch?v=rRqV8BHE8lY
nikodunk
·قبل 9 أشهر·discuss
I'm working on a super-simple budgeting app called https://4keynumbers.com, which is based on Ramit Sethi's Conscious Spending Plan. It currently syncs my expenses from Plaid and cooks it down into a single chart, with only savings, investments, bills/fixed, and "safe to spend" as categories.
nikodunk
·قبل 10 أشهر·discuss
As soon as Fedora/Centos updates their images (pretty much immediately usually as it's upstream of EL), and the CI runs to re-layer the Bluefin changes. They also have Dependabot set up. https://github.com/ublue-os/bluefin/actions

It's just OCI images, like any web-scale project.
nikodunk
·قبل 10 أشهر·discuss
Yes! I used to use Silverblue too. Things like Tailscale, Docker, Davinci Resolve, nvidia drivers, and all codecs are a button-click away or already properly set up for you out of the box on the universal blue projects.
nikodunk
·قبل 10 أشهر·discuss
Same here! Been developing embedded, server and frontend stuff all fron Bluefin/Bazzite for 2 years now. Having Homebrew and Tailscale all set up for me is super clean, and the system is just set-and-forget. Gaming works great too.
nikodunk
·قبل 10 أشهر·discuss
Great article. Loved the bit where they decided to split off their desktop OS from their phone OS.
nikodunk
·قبل 10 أشهر·discuss
Very well written and reasoned article. I’ve struggled with a lot of the same issues with SQLite prod deployments. They appear simple, but then after you’ve ensured your file is on non-ephemeral storage, sorted out backups, and thought about vertical scaling or having separate dbs for jobs and models, a lot of the benefits over psql disappear IMO.

The main benefit over psql of course being that you don’t need to pay for a hosted db like RDS, or have a separate database server.

I’ve found a happy middle ground in simply self-hosting psql and my apps on the same VPS with something like dokploy. Local development is still easy enough, and remote deployment in containers is 1-click with Dokploy, and ends up being simpler to reason about IMO. My take below, if anyone’s interested.

https://nikodunk.com/2025-06-10-diy-serverless-(coreos-+-dok...