#dashboard

danie10@squeet.me

Use Python to make an API for monitoring your Raspberry Pi hardware and build a dashboard with Appsmith

Screen showing Raspberry Pi stats with circle icons showing CPU, memory usage, disk usage, CPU trend graph, etc.
Yes, there are easier dashboards to just install and use, but this is a pretty good article on how to configure for the use of Appsmith (which can be used for many other purposes).

Appsmith is an open source, low-code app builder that helps developers build internal apps like dashboards and admin panels easily and quickly. It’s a great choice for your dashboard, and reduces the time and complexity of traditional coding approaches.

See https://opensource.com/article/23/3/build-raspberry-pi-dashboard-appsmith
#Blog, #appsmith, #dashboard, #opensource, #raspberrypi, #technology

danie10@squeet.me

Dashy is an open source, highly customisable, easy to use, privacy-respecting dashboard app

Bild/Foto
It’s packed full of useful features, to help you build your perfect dashboard. Including status checks, keyboard shortcuts, dynamic widgets, auto-fetched favicon icons and font-awesome support, built-in authentication, tons of themes, an interactive config editor, many display layouts plus loads more.

All the code is free and open source, and everything is thoroughly documented, you can get support with any questions on GitHub.

I explain in this video how and why I use a dashboard, and contrast some differences between Heimdall and Dashy. I’ll also highlight some features, such status indicators and widgets that display data from the Glances monitoring tool.

See https://youtu.be/JW2YJp34SQw

#technology #dashy #dashboard #opensource
#Blog, ##dashboard, ##dashy, ##opensource, ##technology