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36 votes
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Best Linux Distro for gaming/noob
Hey y’all. Recently picked up a Cyberpower prebuilt. Looking to install a Linux distro on it for gaming. Currently have Ubuntu on my laptop, so I’m not a total noob, but my experience is still...
Hey y’all. Recently picked up a Cyberpower prebuilt. Looking to install a Linux distro on it for gaming. Currently have Ubuntu on my laptop, so I’m not a total noob, but my experience is still low. Not a big fan of having to use the terminal. Any distros y’all would recommend? Am leaning toward Pop_OS or SteamOS.
7 votes -
What do you use to journal with?
The recent PKM thread had me thinking about what folks are using as journaling app/portal. I do use Obsidian for my second brain right now and genuinely love it. But I find the mobile app on...
The recent PKM thread had me thinking about what folks are using as journaling app/portal. I do use Obsidian for my second brain right now and genuinely love it. But I find the mobile app on Android to be a bit clunky, if I'm honest. Seems slow to open even with very few plugins. For jounaling I've used DayOne for years. I started back when it was iOS/MacOS only, but then switched phone to Android and haven't been back. But now they have an app and web app for that. What I don't like is the somewhat goofy format it saves in and it's on their servers. They used to allow you to at least leverage your own Dropbox, but no longer.
For the past several months I've tried several FOSS options. Main criteria is that I could host it myself, supports offline entries stored in an open file format (preferably MarkDown), and had either multi platform app or a decent web app. That lead me to try these:
Memos
Pros:- Great persistent web app
- Slick UI that is light and snappy
- markdown support
Cons: - Stuffs the .md inside a database file so can be a bit cumbersome to export data
- No offline support. There is a 3rd party app that hopes to implement it
Flatnotes
Pros:- Incredibly simple
- Another easily deployed app
- Flat Markdown files
Cons: - Web app on mobile is almost unusable as in it doesn't scale well to smaller screens
- Very early development, but very likely to stay as minimalistic as it is now.
- No offline and very unlikely to ever have it
Joplin
Pros:- Multi platform apps that perform well
- End-to-end encryption supported
- Could replace both DayOne and my To-do solution (Google Keep)
- Offline support
Cons: - More database stuff instead of flat markdown files
One solution I've been testing lately is using IAWriter to write to a 'Journal' folder within my Obsidian vault on Google drive
Obsidian Vault > Journal > 2023....for example. This works surprisingly well. Of course IAWriter is a bit spendy at $29 for Android and then more $ for other platforms as they're sold separately.So I'm curious what other people are using for just simple daily journaling, random thoughts, etc. If there's an approach I've missed I'd love to hear it. Joplin is so dang close but not having the structure of plaintext files is a no go for me as I don't want to be trapped by any one product should something happen to the development down the road. Doesn't have to be free, but I want control of the entries either on my own server or cloud storage.
46 votes -
Free and/or open-source software alternatives for churches
I've been seeing some cool software in the church space lately with lots of fancy bells and whistles that handle many different aspects of running a church (social, presentation, tithing, etc.)....
I've been seeing some cool software in the church space lately with lots of fancy bells and whistles that handle many different aspects of running a church (social, presentation, tithing, etc.). However, not all churches, especially small ones, can afford them or have members savvy enough to set it all up and maintain/operate them. I thought this could be a cool thread for free and or open source software that churches can use can use (Does not necessarily need to be design specifically for churches).
EDIT
Here is a list of paid examples:- Renewed Vision
- ProPresenter
- ProVideoPlayer
- ProVideoServer
- Scoreboard
- ProContent
- Microsoft Office
- PowerPoint
- Excel
- Google
- Slides
- Sheets
- Forms
Here is a short list of FOSS alternatives:
- Free Show
- Owncast
- Rock RMS
- Choyr
- OBS
- OpenLP
- WorshipTools
21 votes - Renewed Vision
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Proton Pass, open-source and encrypted password manager
17 votes -
SoftGPU: Software and hardware accelerated driver for Windows 9x Virtual Machines
5 votes -
A monocle display with open-source hardware from Brilliant Labs
4 votes -
Jeff Geerling: I'm done with Red Hat (Enterprise Linux)
32 votes -
Linux 6.4 debuts
9 votes -
Twinkle Tray: FOSS display brightness control
9 votes -
Understanding Red Hat's restrictions to CentOS source redistribution
20 votes -
KeenWrite 3.3.2: MermaidJS diagrams (with caveat)
9 votes -
What is Flowpilot?
3 votes -
Reforming the free software message
6 votes -
The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz
18 votes -
Free wiki farm Miraheze will shut down
21 votes -
What we can learn from the upside-down world of FOSDEM, the largest conference organized with free software
8 votes -
Why does it seem that FOSS users don't value user-friendliness very much?
The vast majority of free and open source software available is well known for being clunky, having very unintuitive UI/UX and being very inaccessible to non-nerds. We can see this in Linux...
The vast majority of free and open source software available is well known for being clunky, having very unintuitive UI/UX and being very inaccessible to non-nerds.
We can see this in Linux distros, tools, programs and even fediverse sites.
I understand that a lot of it is because "it's free", but I also feel like a lot of people who make and use FOSS don't actually value user-friendliness at all. I feel like some of it is in order to gatekeep the less tech savvy out, and some of it is "it's good enough for me".
What are the best theories for why this is the case?
EDIT: A lot of replies I've been getting are focusing on the developers. I'm asking more why the users seem okay with it, rather than why the developers make it that way.
67 votes -
MNT Reform Next will be a thinner, faster laptop
5 votes -
"I booted Linux 292,612 times"
11 votes -
Dev snapshot: Godot 4.1 beta 1
17 votes -
DeArrow: Crowdsourcing YouTube titles and thumbnails to be descriptive and not sensational
26 votes -
They're rebuilding the Death Star of complexity
16 votes -
A small WebView wrapper for Tildes
I know a lot of people have been asking for an app, if just for a home screen/app drawer icon, so I cobbled together a small WebView wrapper that installs on your phone as an app. It's for Android...
I know a lot of people have been asking for an app, if just for a home screen/app drawer icon, so I cobbled together a small WebView wrapper that installs on your phone as an app.
It's for Android only (sorry iOS users) and probably will receive very little support, since I'm not an Android developer! In fact, this is just a fork of the vastly more capable woheller69's gptAssist, ported over to support Tildes and with some limiting functionality removed. Absolutely check out some of their stuff! My app and the original gptAssist are both licensed under the GPLv3. If anyone would like to contribute, please do! In fact, if you're an Android dev, feel free to fork and make it much better.
I absolutely appreciate the design philosophy of the Tildes devs and think that a WebView wrapper is a good compromise between having an app and using the thoughtfully-built website. If you're anything like me, you just like being able to tap on an icon to get to where you're going. I put this together with that in mind.
19 votes -
Farmd alpha
9 votes -
The Dingo | A low cost, open-source robot quadruped
8 votes -
It's not much, but I got an icon for Tildes added to the aegis-icon pack
19 votes -
Stand up for open source software patent defense
7 votes -
How much are GitHub stars worth to you?
6 votes -
The icon sets proposed in the icon contest
8 votes -
This week in KDE: For fevelopers
5 votes -
Review: Inform 7
7 votes -
Shockolate - A minimalist and cross platform System Shock source port
7 votes -
Using computers more freely and safely
8 votes -
CodeWeavers, maker of open source Wine software used in Linux gaming, transitions to employee ownership trust
14 votes -
Hundreds of millions of stars turned into a map of GitHub projects
12 votes -
Calckey is a open source social media platform that is a part of the fediverse and can categories your feed to custom feeds
5 votes -
UFO hunters built an open-source AI system to scan the skies
4 votes -
2023 Library Systems Report | The advance of open source systems
4 votes -
Bringing memory safety to sudo and su
6 votes -
A drive to Taco Bell
4 votes -
KeenWrite 3.3.0
6 votes -
Ushering in a new era for open-source silicon development
2 votes -
Show Tildes: a little, portable, hackable graph-drawing tool
13 votes -
After 2 years of working full-time on my open-source project (Mockoon), I have been accepted to the GitHub Accelerator program!
5 votes -
freeciv21 (a civilization like strategy game and a fork of freeciv migrated to C++) releases first stable release 3.0
10 votes -
Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead (A open source survival RPG) is now on steam with the money from the sales going to fund one of the developers
7 votes -
Introducing trurl: a tool in a similar spirit of tr but for URLs
9 votes -
What are the potential negative consequences of open-sourcing the Twitter recommendation code?
I'm not sure anything quite like this has happened before. What problems could happen as a result of this?
4 votes -
I’m now a full-time professional open source maintainer (how a maintainer is now making an income equivalent to his Google compensation)
9 votes