I would like to have a screen in my home displaying a summary of different information that is relevant to me, like weather forecast, bus/train times, news headlines, etc. I was planning to use a Raspberry Pi and either buy a screen to display the information or just show it on my TV. It could probably be as simple as serving a page with HTML and JavaScript and then displaying it in a full screen web browser.

I feel like this is probably something that a lot of people want so I am wondering if there is something out there already that can easily be extended with custom “widgets”. Nextcloud actually has a dashboard that’s a bit like this but ideally I’d like something that is standalone and easier to extend with my own widgets.

Anyone have any recommendations?

  • brian@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    The first thing that springs to mind is something like a “magic mirror”. I haven’t delved into it a ton, but I’m fairly certain that it would be able to hit most of your criteria.

    That being said, I’d think it could be a decent enough starting point to at least find other things in the same vein.

    • sol@lemm.eeOP
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      1 year ago

      Yes you’re right, what I’m thinking of is basically a magic mirror without the mirror. Thanks for the link, I will check that out!

  • idle@158436977.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I use Flame Dashboard for something similar to this. It uses a simple sqllite database, so i just whipped together a few python scripts that gather information such as my to do list, calendar, gir repos, etc and update the database table it uses.

    • hikeandbike
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      1 year ago

      I just set up flame and am liking it so far. Care to share your scripts?

      • idle@158436977.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Keep in mind they are hacked together and were not meant for mass consumption. Here is an example of one of the scripts that contacts the gitea api and inserts the most recent 10 issues into Flames database with a specific category.

        `import sqlite3 from datetime import datetime import requests import re import json from datetime import datetime, timezone

        def insert_bookmark(name, url, category_id, order_id): conn = sqlite3.connect(‘/app/db.sqlite’) cursor = conn.cursor()

        cursor.execute("SELECT MAX(id) FROM bookmarks")
        result = cursor.fetchone()
        max_id = result[0] if result[0] else 0
        
        current_time = datetime.now().strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f %z')
        values = (name, url, category_id, "", current_time, current_time, 0, order_id)
        
        cursor.execute("INSERT INTO bookmarks (name, url, categoryId, icon, createdAt, updatedAt, isPublic, orderId) VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?);", values)
        
        max_id += 1
        
        conn.commit()
        conn.close()
        
        return max_id
        

        def delete_bookmark(category_id): conn = sqlite3.connect(‘/app/db.sqlite’) cursor = conn.cursor() cursor.execute(“DELETE FROM bookmarks WHERE categoryId = ?”, (category_id,)) # Commit the changes and close the connection conn.commit() conn.close()

        def get_recently_updated_issues(repo_urls, user_name, api_token): headers = { “Authorization”: f"token {api_token}", “Content-Type”: “application/json” }

        all_issues = []
        
        for repo_url, repo_name in repo_urls:
            api_url = repo_url
        
            # Query the Gitea API to get the issues
            response = requests.get(api_url, headers=headers, params={"state": "all"})
            response.raise_for_status()
        
            issues = response.json()
        
            sorted_issues = sorted(issues, key=lambda x: x["updated_at"], reverse=True)
        
            all_issues.extend(sorted_issues[:5])
        
        sorted_all_issues = sorted(all_issues, key=lambda x: x["updated_at"], reverse=True)
        
        recent_issue_titles = []
        recent_issue_links = []
        recent_timestamps = []
        
        for issue in sorted_all_issues[:10]:
            title = issue["title"]
            link = issue["html_url"]
            timestamp = issue["updated_at"]
        
            recent_issue_titles.append(title)
            recent_issue_links.append(link)
            recent_timestamps.append(timestamp)
        
        return recent_issue_titles, recent_issue_links, recent_timestamps
        

        repo_urls = [ (“https://gitea.example.com/api/v1/repos/user1/repo1/issues”, “repo1”), (“https://gitea.example.com/api/v1/repos/user1/repo2/issues”, “repo2”) ] user_name = “user1” api_token = “example token”

        delete_bookmark(8) order_id = 1

        recent_issue_titles, recent_issue_links, recent_timestamps = get_recently_updated_issues(repo_urls, user_name, api_token)

        for title, link, timestamp in zip(recent_issue_titles, recent_issue_links, recent_timestamps): print(“Issue Title:”, title) print(“Issue Link:”, link) print(“Last Updated:”, timestamp) print() bookmark_id = insert_bookmark(title, link, 8, order_id) order_id += 1`

  • monty@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    I use Heimdall. It is basic and simple to setup. I tried Organizr but it was more customization than I was looking for.

    • Mike@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      +1 for Heimdall, but I don’t think it does widgets. It’s more like a Intranet homepage.

  • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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    1 year ago

    If you want to skip the web browser + server part (well, sort of), you could also build your dashboard as an electron or nwjs app. That way you can easily make it go fullscreen on its own and it doesn’t come with most browser UI around your page. It’s still running essentially Chrome, but it has some advantages if you need to interact with system things, run shell commands at the press of a button, etc.