

I’ve used it for a few years, without any of those problems.
I am:
@clb92@feddit.dk (MAIN LEMMY PROFILE)
@clb92@mastodon.social (Main Mastodon profile)
@clb92@kbin.social
@clb92@lemmy.world
@clb92@lemmy.ml
And /u/clb92 on Reddit (and many other places)


I’ve used it for a few years, without any of those problems.


Not the guy you replied to, but I’m a JuiceSSH user too, and I didn’t know this. That sucks.
Or a completely made-up bullshit answer that just wastes your time.


All umami instances have been infected with a persisting crypto miner.
Source for that claim? Because vulnerable does not mean infected.
Also, I’m kinda glad my instance has been offline for a while now because of database trouble. That was lucky.
Define app
Yeah, but organized into as many threads as there are issues/PRs, so it’s exactly as daunting as the same list as viewed on GitHub/project/issues (because it is exactly the same content).
Surely, dedicated tools for managing/tracking issues give you better tools for triaging, filtering, planning and such, compared to a mail client…
Awesome and detailed explanation, thanks. I figured they’d be juggling a lot of mails, and I guess it is possible for some people to stay on top of that and keep it all organized with a good mail client, but still… I would get lost so quickly.
Thanks again!
I’m probably gonna sound like a noob now, but how does one even properly handle issue tracking, working like that?
What did they use before? GitLab? A hosted solution like GitHub or Codeberg?


The Vorbis audio codec was also named after Vorbis from Small Gods, the 13th Discworld book.
An astronaut’s laptop running Windows is obviously not what’s controlling the rocket.