I'm looking to talk to someone, ideally from an agency or small cooperative, who has switched to Nextcloud.

I'm interested in how people have things like Time Tracking and Deck configured for project/client work.

(please boost!)

Pretty telling that despite ~50 boosts of the above post, it seems there's not many people *using* Nextcloud? 🤔

If @weareopencoop do end up using it, perhaps we should write a guide that starts where this one from @homegrown ends?

https://growyourown.services/beginners-guide-to-nextcloud

A Beginner’s Guide to Nextcloud – Grow Your Own Services

@dajbelshaw @weareopencoop @homegrown Well the guide is nice and all, but then you get to step 10 and think "holy crap, I'm not going to do this."

@Downes @dajbelshaw @weareopencoop

Thanks for feedback!

You mean the warning about legal issues? Sorry, I wasn't intending to scare people off!

I wasn't sure whether to put that in or not, but I thought it's better to be aware of it in advance rather than having any nasty surprises.

I'm guessing most people will never have problems though, so I don't know if it's overdoing the warning... 🤔

@homegrown I wouldn't say it's a necessary thing to include - it's true of every other service as well. @Downes @dajbelshaw @weareopencoop
@homegrown I would, however, point out that if you use your own NextCloud, you won't be having your (or your fellow users, e.g. you kids, if they're also using it, as mine do) data surveilled and used to build advertising (and or National Security) profiles.... to me that's a *huge* privacy/sovereignty win. @Downes @dajbelshaw @weareopencoop

@lightweight @homegrown @dajbelshaw @weareopencoop

Oh I agree.

My main comment here is that the big legal warning is totally unnecessary and needlessly scares people off using what is actually a better alternative.