WTFUtil is free open source dashboard terminal with todo, weather, IP details, clocks, and some other configurable modules. There are some other dashboard creators you can use but if you prefer a terminal based one then WTFUtil is for you. It comes with a long list of widgets which you can configure and use it to display some meaningful data. Along with this, you can use the keyboard controls to edit some values and the dashboard will update itself after the specified interval of time.
A dashboard is used to keep an eye on some stats which are helpful in your day to day work. You can use dashboard to monitor your social media stats, system resource usage, and some others. The dashboard terminal which I have added here can show much more than that. All you have to do is configure it accordingly using a simple configuration file. Also, since it is an open source tool, you can create some custom modules for it yourself if you know coding.
Open Source Dashboard Terminal with Todo, Weather, IP Details, Clocks
WTFUtil currently works on Linux and MAC. There are pre-compiled binaries for it and you just download them and start using it. All the modules that it supports are customizable. From a Todo list, you can use it to display top Hacker News stories, your IP location, weather details, and much more. You can tweak different modules of this dashboard with a simple configuration that I will mention later in this post.
The package is built upon a Python-based dashboard server, which support the Bokeh visualization library to display and update figures in real time[1] . An additional Jupyter-Lab extension embeds these dashboards as movable windows within an interactive environment. Most GPU metrics are collected through PyNVML, an open-source Python package composing wrappers for the NVIDIA Management Library (NVML). For this reason, the available dashboards can be modified/extended to display any queryable GPU metrics accessible through NVML.
While OpenSprinkler can work with a digital soil moisture sensor that outputs binary signal (i.e. 1 or 0), the firmware currently does not support analog soil moisture sensor, or digital sensors which do not output binary signal. Development is under way to integrate analog soil moisture sensor. At the moment, you can combine your analog sensor with a voltage comparator circuit such as based on LM393, to achieve the analog to binary output conversion. As OpenSprinkler is open-source, you can modify the software to include these and additional sensors such as water-level sensor, motion sensor. If you are not familiar with programming, this provides a great motivation to start learning to program. 2ff7e9595c
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