trueheresy
Thanks so much for sharing this Bookwyrm is on my radar to try (currently use storygraph). I've been looking for ways to contribute to the open source community as a non-coder so def going to check out bookbrainz. Freedom of information is one of my biggest passions and this goes hand in hand with those goals as they form the backbone of meaningful archival efforts.
Thanks for saying this - I did click the link but saw it was 45mins and was immediately out until I read the comments.
Incredible video. I love him!
Thanks so much for the reply, I'll give it a download to play with it - I certainly am a big fan of simple!
This looks great. Thanks so much for your work on this and sharing with us.
What in your opinion sets your software apart from the other options you mention?
I have recently setup dockers for plex, immich, nextcloud and paperlessngx but have yet to look at longterm maintenence inc. things like auto updates (I know to avoid on immich).
As someone who prob knows the options inside and out - would you recommend your option to this relative newbie or do you think one of the other options might be a better place to start?
This was a fantastic read, thanks for sharing.
Like the other commenter I would love to know where I could read more exploring this line of thinking, any pointers?
The world: How much are your eggs?
Trump: $100
The world: Sure we'll help... that will be $99.
That they can't see they are actually saying...
If god is so bad then why did ~~he give~~ we buy Joel Osteen such a giant house??
Ah I'm envious... Mine is only 2 and there is a lot less interesting stuff going on with Duplo 😅
Do it! I cannot stress how much fun it is to discover that your handful of sets can also be built into a dozen other cool things. Especially if you struggle to come up with amazing ideas yourself, the more sets you find you can build, the more you'll learn.
On that note - if you haven't played with Lego since you were a kid like I did ... you are about to be blown away by how cool some of the build techniques are and what they can accomplish.
For me it looked like tupperware city... Every old plastic container I could find.
This was helpful to me although says much more than needed - for a TLDR just scroll down to the example with the red bricks being categorised into big groups and then broken down again. (I can't emphasize enough though doing things by color is horrendous 😅)
There isn't anything on here I don't think but I do think there is r/Legostorage (might not have remembered the name perfectly) which has tonnes of good ideas and advice. Ultimately after you have added all the parts you are going to want to store them in a meaningful way to actually get them quickly.
Oh and when searching parts look out for printed parts or very unique looking parts - often you'll find those are in very few sets and it'll give you an idea of sets you might have.
Additionally rebrickable let's you convert parts into sets if you have all the parts.