Comment on Searching advice for selfhosting critical data
hamsda@lemm.ee 5 weeks agoThank you for sharing your experience of the process!
On my phone, I use DAVx5
I’m a little confused after looking at the website. What exactly does DAVx5 do? The regular re-sync of contacts, calendar and files itself? Shouldn’t that be done by the contacts app / calendar app on regular intervalls?
with Fossify apps
I just downloaded fossify calendar on my android a few days ago to test it and got to see the other fossify apps :)
syncthing phasing out android support
Oh man, I already use syncthing for ~5 GB of files and I use it on my android too. Seems I’ll be trying syncthing-android-fdroid in the future then.
There are tons of notes apps
There really are a lot! NotallyX looks nice and simple, but memos also looks very interesting. And thank you for the link, I’ll go dive into that tomorrow.
The one Google feature I am not able to reproduce is Google Messages
I do not need RCS-compatible messengers. What I send via SMS is nothing more than pure text, also no group chats. I use signal and element for my “fancy” messaging needs :)
I use Tailscale
I’ll look into it some more over the next days, but on a quick glance, this seems like it is an online service where you need an account? If that’s the case, I’d prefer using my already running OpenVPN server to do the job.
gedaliyah@lemmy.world 5 weeks ago
DAVx5 basically acts as the connector between your server and your calendar/contacts/files apps. I would imagine that this could be built into an app, but there are a lot of ways that such apps can sync or operate locally. I’m guessing that it is just a little more specialized than most developers want to get.
Thanks for the Syncthing-Fork tip! For now the official version is working for me, but I’ll have to migrate myself soon.
From my understanding, OpenVPN provides the same secure remote access as Tailscale, by a slightly different method. You should be fine to use what you’ve already set up.
hamsda@lemm.ee 5 weeks ago
Thank you for the explanation. I’ll probably be testing a lot of FOSS apps on my current android before I make the switch, so it’s good to know that I have to look out not just for usability, but also connectivity!