@farnkraut @amberage You should be able to run @nextcloud on a Raspberry Pi unless I’m mistaken (although I’d recommend getting maybe a clone or a similar single board computer if you don’t want to support their hiring a spy cop and bragging about it). It’s probably the best option at the moment.
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Aral Balkan (aral@mastodon.ar.al)'s status on Tuesday, 11-Jul-2023 05:39:06 JST Aral Balkan -
farnkraut (farnkraut@digitalcourage.social)'s status on Tuesday, 11-Jul-2023 05:39:14 JST farnkraut @amberage Mh. Okay. I don’t know about how to implement something on your own machine tbh. I am not that tech-savvy. Maybe @aral can point you in the right direction ?
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Mx Amber Alex (she/it) (amberage@eldritch.cafe)'s status on Tuesday, 11-Jul-2023 05:39:15 JST Mx Amber Alex (she/it) @farnkraut I don't have a server, this would have to be a "I'll just leave my computer running 24/7" thing (possibly raspi-like in the future, when I'm less impoverished)
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farnkraut (farnkraut@digitalcourage.social)'s status on Tuesday, 11-Jul-2023 05:39:17 JST farnkraut a bit more than just a calendar but @nextcloud can be run on your own server or hosted by your trusted provider of choice and can also be used to sync your calendar (as well as other things).
I recently set up one for myself through a hosting service and it was simple enough. They also have at least a decent documentation for stuff.
I’m sure there is more out there though.
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Mx Amber Alex (she/it) (amberage@eldritch.cafe)'s status on Tuesday, 11-Jul-2023 05:39:18 JST Mx Amber Alex (she/it) Okay so if I wanted to run my own calendar server locally (so that my email clients on different devices could hook into it, without putting all my data in Google's hands), how would I go about that?
Assume I know nothing about the subject (I don't), any software and tutorial recommendations?
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