As others have noticed, this is similar to ytch.xyz.
What ytch does better is that it is mostly keyboard navigable (with minor annoyances), which also makes it usable with a remote control, unlike this.
I actually do use ytch (alongside Kodi and YT Leanback mode) on my Raspberry Pi HTPC that is controlled by remote only. Works fine. Chromium, kiosk mode, entry in ~/.local/share/applications/ytch.desktop, and you're good to go.
I guess you could use this with a remote if your remote can emulate mouse, mine doesn't. Mine is just some old otherwise useless remote recycled from the junk drawer, and made useful again by a cheap IR receiver diode from Amazon.
I'm not too crazy about the UI of Channel Surfer in general, but others have noted that it reminds them of cable services they used, I guess that was the goal.
I'll check out Channel Surfer in a few months. I wish you luck and lots of users :)
It has no support for rrdcached flush, AVERAGE CF is hardcoded , and I cannot seem to get it to not connect lines through gaps where there were no measurements.
I don't think there's a tiling wm that puts mouse first. I think years ago there was some work on KDE to add some tiling behaviour, but I don't know if it was merged and buried in settings somewhere, or it was a plugin, or a patch. I only remember some demonstration video from years ago.
I'm pretty sure there's also Openbox setup with tiling behavior.
I use dwm with some patches, and some customizations that allow for more mouse use.
For instance mouse wheel on the tagbar cycles through tags, mouse wheel on window title cycles through windows, middle click on window title makes currently selected window master, control + mouse wheel on the window title pushes selected window around, mouse wheel on status text increases or decreases sound volume, middle click on status text kills selected window, ctrl + mouse-wheel-up sends selected window to that particular tag, etc etc etc...
So yeah, it's doable in dwm. It's not "mouse first" but most used actions are also doable with mouse, in addition to the keyboard.
It's not too hard, spend an afternoon, or two and you can get it working that way.
Once their system upgrade crashed my Mongo instance and only support they could provide was telling me I should have had backups. They were right but I had to move out.
I still remember this problem. To my best knowledge nobody else has ever had data loss after a clean shutdown and no hardware problems.
It sounded to me like it could have been the same problem as this person encountered:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10560834/to-what-extent-... . Based on their data
loss after a clean shutdown of mongodb in order to perform a backup, I think the only way we could have possibly saved the data is if we hibernated the system instead of doing a clean shutdown. But I don't know how well mongodb handles sudden time jumps. In general, since time jumps can be an issue, we typically perform shutdowns if a service needs to be stopped for whatever reason.
I hope you ended up with a hosted mongodb service or an MSP with an expertise specifically with mongodb, as mongo seems like it can be very tricky to administer properly if it's not the one thing you do.
Well, the tagline on their front page does read "We don't assume you're stupid.".
I'm not calling you stupid, I think everyone has failed to backup something important at one point or another, just saying that the sentiment behind the business seems to be "services provided with minimum hand-holding"
If you search for my name there, you will find at least discussions about file modes and also why I claim that processes are a failed abstraction (it was really another user who pointed that out).
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