This one feels more geared for developers, but it works just fine. Used it a couple times: https://github.com/phase1geo/Minder
This one feels more geared for developers, but it works just fine. Used it a couple times: https://github.com/phase1geo/Minder


You probably only want to use the websocket as a control point, and have another socket open to receive an audio as passthrough? Pretty sure that’s how Sonos et al do it. More lightweight, and you don’t have to worry about overruns like you’re dealing with now perhaps.


It’s to say without more specifics, but you’d only be getting up to 64MB max on the P4.
What audio are you streaming to the device exactly? Are you using any offloading? What’s the memory until on your current project?
I’m not sure what kind of lagging you’re talking about, but these devices are meant to be anything but responsive or real-time. Thinking of some audio applications I’ve run on a few, and they all have that 250ms sort of lag when dealing with audio operations. I’ve never dug deeper into myself.


Yeah, so where are you seeing that I’m somehow making them a cohesive situation?


Then you’re not understanding what I said. Can’t help you there.
Edit: are you confused on what the word “or” means, perhaps, or is it the Oxford Comma?


I’m not sure what you’re thinking is nuanced. They’re complete separate and distinct ideas.


As others have pointed out, I think you should read the context of what OP is saying.
Had, then lost. Thinking about a lost time. Literally the title.
You’re just describing a subjective way to process feelings.


Essentially, you’re just describing a feeling of “Better Times”, or nostalgia. Nothing wrong with that, and everyone has those feelings.
It becomes a problem when people tend to fixate on that, and not realize that time has passed. Not that you can’t create those conditions and feelings again, but that life circumstances and everything else really make it impossible to replicate that same thing again realistically.
I think it may serve you better to focus on what about that situation made it great for you, and what practical means you have to create a similar social circle again that will approximate those same feelings. It won’t be exactly the same, of course, but it sounds like you have just been feeling somewhat lost without a similar group of people around you.


I’m saying I don’t think there is in this case. I’m not sure what the use case would be simply because you could use any other tools for this specific job.
It’s like asking for an “offline browser” in a sense.
Just use NocoDB or a spreadsheet or something.


Offline first for online content? Whoa buddy, where’s this Moon you’re asking for?
Seriously though, you need to be realistic when you’re asserting your wants for a service or tool. Everyone builds tools to sync bookmarks and save lists now, because that’s a feature that users want. It’s going to be difficult to find something that is “offline”.
Try using a memo app maybe? Lots of password managers have the ability to save links, and would technically be “outside” the browser if you want them to be.


Yup. Same with any other as well. If you don’t want to use Steam, I think a lot of people find Lutris and Heroic simple.and functional for all levels of user, and they also include the ability to run Steam Runtimes and Proton versions pretty simply too.
All of these launchers run Wine under the hood, and are a good abstraction on top of that entire stack. Just makes it super simple to manage.


TLDR: use a prefix manager instead of plain Wine
You can install them anywhere, but if you’re using plain Wine, I’d suggest you instead go with something that will manage these locations for you.
Each Wine setup has what is called a “prefix”, which in the simplest sense is just a folder that is setup like a Windows C:\ drive, and includes all the shared libraries and bits needed to run the game. When a program run is launched, it is locked into this prefix, so when it goes looking for files as it would on Windows, it’s going to find a familiar folder structure, including installed dependencies like MS VC libraries and DirectX stuff.
Now…when you as a user are just using Wine directly, you’d generally be using the SAME prefix to install multiple games, which is hard to manage, and just clunky.
Prefix managers like Proton, Lutris, Bottles and even Heroic will make a new prefix for EACH program, making things like troubleshooting, switching runtimes, or invoking custom configs per program a LOT easier.


Bud…been doing this for 20 years. Don’t need your explainer.
The fact you didn’t mention the barest of minimums in your comment if where the issue lies. You’re just adding stacks on stacks of things by using any other network mount and having the user manage an encrypted image inside that mount. Also absent from what you were trying to explain. I’d work on that.
Point being, for a multi-user/tenant utility like OP is asking for, there are better tools for the job, of which I just named a couple standalone options. If they are running TrueNAS, Synology, or QNAP, or even NextCloud, there are already built-ins for this purpose, and apps to match.
If not, any of the other solutions I mentioned are much better suited for the use-case, especially, and if not only because, OP specifically said they DID NOT want exactly what you’re describing.


OP said they DON’T want LUKS. I’m also missing how the admin of the server (OP) wouldn’t have or store the keys unless and have these mounts available at all times?
You seem to be suggesting there is some way for a remote user to mount a LUKS image on its host, which is not a thing unless you’re first SSH’ing to said host and mounting it and making it available for export mount elsewhere, which is clearly not what OP is asking for here when they just want space for people to store media. Maybe I’m misunderstanding.
There Hook, Filen, Yeetfile, BatchIT…tons of these self-hosted stacks that do this with auth and user management built in. That’s what OP is asking about.


Those aren’t end-to-end encrypted from the user, and would need to be mounted on the local system with a key that is unique to each user. Not exactly user-friendly if supporting multiple users.
There are plenty of other solutions meant for the purpose OP is asking about.


There’s dozens out there, but the bigger question is: what’s your current hosting setup? What NAS are you running?
It would be simpler to just run something that your NAS platform supports already or has a mobile app for. Pretty much every solution you’ll find with e2e encryption is going to have its own client.


It’s a Flatpak. Did you give it proper permissions to use this hardware?


Hold the top button until the light starts blinking say the instructions.
This will change your life: https://ublacklist.github.io/docs