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Posts
6
Comments
35
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • That's a valid question! The app is intended for less tech-savvy people, as such, the terminologies used are to accommodate those users. "Upload" would rather be "Import", while "Download" would be "Export".

    I've shared the use case in a previous Lemmy post:

    This app is designed to compress smaller batches of images, aimed at casual users who need to compress and convert a few images at a time.

    I created it primarily for friends and family who are less tech-savvy, to help them compress and convert images in a simple, safe, and private way.

  • At the moment, I haven't integrate Youlag with FreshRSS as a full fledge extension, but once that is in place, it would be possible to store user preferences. While it requires time and effort, I believe it shouldn't be too hard to implment this feature.

  • Sorry about that, I've included the fix in the latest release, and instructions on how to bypass the loading screen in the release notes:

    https://github.com/civilblur/youlag/releases/tag/v3.0.4

    Here in an excerpt from the release note:

    In case FreshRSS got stuck in a loading state with the v3.0.2 release:

    You can manually bypass the loading state by opening the inspect mode on your browser. Within the "Elements" tab, locate the body element and add the CSS class youlag-loaded.

    Example:

    • From <body class="normal">
    • To <body class="normal youlag-loaded">.

    The adjustment above will exit the loading state, allowing you to interact with the content and access the extension page.

    For your convenience, below is the url path to the "User CSS" extension page:

    https://yourfreshrssdomain.com/i/?c=extension&a=configure&e=User%2BCSS

    Head to this page and replace the old CSS with the one provided in this release.

    Edit: Fixed typo on CSS class name

  • Addressing the subscribing part; I had similar requirements, so I started subscribing via FreshRSS while using a custom theme to give it a YouTube-like experience.

    I shared the setup a few month ago here: https://lemmy.world/post/21381606

    Edit: One of the benefits of using selfhosted RSS with a web interface is that it is platform agnostic.

  • I have limited knowledge of what limitations extensions have at the moment, but considering FreshRSS is server side rendered, integrating DeArrow on a deeper level would be ideal (if possible). It would mean that the thumbnail and title you get when you load the page would immediately be the non-clickbait ones, and it would only need to run it once for each video (if cached).

    I did however test DeArrow's API and it was very straightforward. However, running it as a client-side script would essentially mean that every video would have to be checked and "DeArrowed" on the fly, and it would do that for every page refresh. That might not be very performant for you, nor DeArrow's free API service.

    In short, it should be possible, but not ideal. I'm personally interested in the idea as well, but I'm not sure if I'll have time to tackle this.

  • It applies the theme across the entire instance!

    I believe it could be done however, but it's likely more suitable as an extension, opposed to a "theme" that relies on client-side css/js. I haven't explored the documentations for extensions as I intended this to be a "quick" solution to get a youtube-like experience.