**#A quick edit to address something important and provide a disclaimer: **

Thank you all for your feedback! This project was “vibecoded” with Cloude AI and serves more as a “proof of concept” for what could be achieved with AI assistance. I’m just a tech enthusiast, and I’m excited to continue exploring new possibilities. I understand there’s a real concern about “AI Slop,” but that’s exactly why I’m sharing this project with you all so that experts who are interested in the idea can offer guidance or even help improve it.

I’ve noticed that many people with home labs prefer to update their applications manually instead of relying on other apps that automate the process. Often, they have to check each one individually. That’s where Vigil comes in. The primary function of Vigil is to centralize the information and give users clear visibility of which applications are outdated, their current version, and the newer version available from several sources. This way, you can decide what and when to update.

To be honest, I hope it ends up being useful to others as it is for me.

If you have a few minutes, I’d really appreciate you trying it out and leaving a review or suggestions on the repo or even here. I’d do my best to answer most of the comments.

REPO: https://github.com/kumucode/vigil.git

  • WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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    6 hours ago

    for a very long time it was not only possible for experts. like, I would say the last 10-15 years, maybe even more. It’s very harmful that people can now create things they don’t even know how to check what it does, and they just assume this “sentient thing” actually produced what you wanted with no major flaws. thing is, you (or anyone else vibecoding things) won’t be able to determine what is good or bad without taking the time and learning the building blocks, learning how they work and how they are supposed to be used.

    also your comments look like AI generated comments, fake enthusiasm and all the rest. it does not inspire much confidence

    • 1step@lemmy.worldOP
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      40 minutes ago

      Geez, it’s really hard to have normal conversation nowadays on the internet. There’s this constant skepticism of AI comments, and I get it. Most of the time I just feel like I’m talking to bots. However, I’m surprised that people really take their time to give their opinions here and they seem to be legit. Weirdly enough, I’m quite a positive and enthusiastic person… or at least I’m trying to practice that. There’s been too much negativity around me lately, but who cares about what happens in my life, right haha? Don’t need to explain myself to any one, but just felt like I needed to do.

      • Elena Brescacin@poliversity.it
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        22 minutes ago

        @1step @selfhosted Frustrating to be treated as a non-human being. People thinking you are a machine commenting. Well, despite being 100% human, it’s almost 26 years I struggle with this (verify you’re a human) due to visual captcha’s. for us visually and/or auditory impaired, senses-based anti-bots (audio and pics) are an irreversible obstacle. And my strong scare is that interactive platforms like social networks, Lemmy included, will soon add some senses-based verifications to avoid bots.
        Damn the bots!

        • 1step@lemmy.worldOP
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          14 minutes ago

          I hate bots, for real… I kind of miss the old days of internet where we could jump in a forum or any community to talk and connect with people. But I kind of get the point of building mechanisms to reduce the “bots infestation”. Things are definitely more complex to visually and/or auditory impaired people. But at least, Lemmy isn’t as annoying as Reddit and people sound genuine.

          • Elena Brescacin@poliversity.it
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            3 minutes ago

            @1step I find comfortable when a bot is designed to describe images, such as AltBot, or Be My Eyes’s BeMyAI - you can also “chat” with the bot to ask questions in order to have further details on what the camera is focusing.
            On web communities (forums and social networks) that should be comfortable if you tag the bot and it replies with the image description. But it should be temporary, as a 24/7 answering bot, replying to EVERY conversation in every moment or (worse) being set up for propaganda, makes the world a worse place - yes it can turn on flames (violent on line argues) so that you will not know if you are talking to a person, or punching the wall.
            In my area we say “hey! Am I talking to the wall?” when someone is stubborn, does never understand what you say, won’t listen, does all the opposite of what you asked them to do.
            We should change it “Oops, I’m talking to a robot”