

You can use the Linuxserver.io VSCodium Image and replace VSCodium with Emacs in the Dockerfile.
You can use the Linuxserver.io VSCodium Image and replace VSCodium with Emacs in the Dockerfile.
Firefly III is an option, but I found it difficult to set up and the importer tool works well for Europe but not the US.
You could also just create your own Docker container which has Skrooge, GnuCash, or KMyMoney in it. I have done this with Skrooge since it imports data well and is simpler than GnuCash.
With the Linuxserver.io KasmVNC base image and install any GUI application to run it from a browser.
Yes, just because the source code is available doesn’t mean it is licensed for others to take. Now we have AI tools that have scraped the web for all of its content and won’t see the difference between source available, open source , and free and open source. It is possible that those who use AI tools could be unknowingly using code without the license to do so.
This argument in this article is poor. An analogy would be:
“Because donating free food to the poor might feed future criminals, we should no longer provide free food.”
Exactly, since KasmVNC can run GUI programs in the browser and the Linux server.io base image is just Debian, it was trivial to just run it with Emacs instead. I much prefer Emacs over VS Code because of Org Mode. While VS Code works well in a browser. It isn’t what I wanted.
Here is where I have posted my Emacs Dockerfile. It might be a little out of date. Emacs Docker
EDIT: The Dockerfile also installs the fonts I like for Emacs along with git and hunspell.
EDIT: You could also probably achieve something similar with a Docker container run ning Apache Guacamole.