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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: August 13th, 2023

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  • I use Nikola and it hasn’t let me down. It just works and supports all the ways I write content: markdown, asciidoc, rest, Jupiter Notebooks, html and so on. It does not have so many themes, but the default one works and it’s not hard to customise if needed. If you like to use python it’s also easy to extend. I’ve written a bit about Nikola here in case it picks your interest.

    I’ve deployed it to CloudFlare pages, but GitHub pages, Gitlab pages and any other provider also work.


  • Ok. Thank you for the explanation!

    I’m just now thinking out los here, but would it make sense to use a PowerShell script to silently install miniconda and create a venv with a specific version?

    Something like

    @echo off
    REM Download Miniconda installer (replace URL with the latest version)
    powershell -Command "Invoke-WebRequest https://repo.anaconda.com/miniconda/Miniconda3-latest-Windows-x86_64.exe -OutFile miniconda.exe"
    
    REM Install Miniconda silently
    start /wait "" miniconda.exe /InstallationType=JustMe /RegisterPython=0 /S /D=%UserProfile%\Miniconda3
    
    REM Create a new environment with the specific Python version
    call %UserProfile%\Miniconda3\Scripts\activate.bat
    call conda create -y -n py39 python=3.9
    
    REM Optional: Set permissions for multi-user access
    icacls %UserProfile%\Miniconda3 /grant:r Users:(OI)(CI)F /T
    

    More on that here https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/install/silent-mode/

    Again, this is just an idea, but if this works then you won’t have a problem anymore (maybe?).





  • I’m happy it helped.
    I tried many systems (paperless and it’s derivatives as well) and I found docspell is a lot easier to use and has all the features I need.

    • I can archive emails by moving them to a category and docspell converts it to pdf and saves it to the database.
    • I can choose a file system storage or a database storage. I chose database storage (Postgres, which is also the default) because is a lot easier to backup)
    • I love the way I can categorize the files by adding recipient and sender. That way I can filter all the files related to a specific person.
    • I can export all the files in a filter to a zip file.
    • I can batch edit.

    That as a summary :)

    My only recommendations are

    • to deploy it using a tag in docker and not using automatically the latest version. That way you are in control of the updates.
    • And always do database backups :) (using a tag in docker means you can always redeploy a specific version.