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13 votes
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An update on Flow's direction
6 votes -
FOSS and UX (twitter thread)
@Kavaeric: Let's walk through this, shall we?Say we've decided to make a new FOSS word processor. Call it, I dunno, Libra-Office or O-Pan-Office. Just a thought. Word processors, as you might guess, are also a fairly entrenched market.Who's our target audience?
26 votes -
Haiku RISC-V port progress
4 votes -
An interview with Linus Torvalds: Linux and Git
11 votes -
KeenWrite 2.0
12 votes -
Linux bans the University of Minnesota for sending intentionally buggy patches in the name of research
58 votes -
Ventoy: Multi-ISO bootable USBs
18 votes -
An update on the UMN affair
10 votes -
twtxt - a decentralised, minimalist microblogging service for hackers
6 votes -
New in progress Blender render engine: Cycles X
7 votes -
Why Lichess will always be free
19 votes -
eProcessor is a project that will create an open source RISC-V core for High Performance Computing (HPC)
7 votes -
disroot (a provider of open source services such as mail) has received funding to implement mailbox encryption
17 votes -
Grafana Labs' core open-source projects (Grafana, Loki, and Tempo) will be relicensed to AGPLv3
8 votes -
Feneas (a non profit provider of open source services), is having problems covering expenses and is at the risk of shutting down, so it is now having a fundraiser
12 votes -
Richard M. Stallman addresses the free software community
40 votes -
To make money in FOSS, build a business first - creator of sway and sourcehut on open source funding
5 votes -
WireGuard bounces off FreeBSD—for now
7 votes -
Open letter to Richard M. Stallman
22 votes -
How I earn a living selling my open source software
10 votes -
Amethyst - Mac OS Tiling Window Manager (like i3wm)
5 votes -
OpenHW Group and Mitacs announce a $22.5M research program for open-source processors
4 votes -
Signal's server repo hasn't been updated since April 2020
26 votes -
Data Transfer Project
6 votes -
Gab removes their public Git repository after it reveals their developers adding (and struggling to fix) basic security issues that led to a 70GB data leak
12 votes -
Keeping platforms open
9 votes -
0 A.D. (a libre RTS) - New release (Alpha 24)
10 votes -
Riff.cc, a torrent website for Creative Commons and free culture
Riff.cc is a private tracker torrent site that is completely focused on works distributed with creative commons, public domain, gpl or other free culture licenses. It has some plans to allow...
Riff.cc is a private tracker torrent site that is completely focused on works distributed with creative commons, public domain, gpl or other free culture licenses.
It has some plans to allow tipping creators and seeders using digital currency.You can use this invite to signup (I believe there is a limit of 90 people who can use it).
https://u.riff.cc/register/fb4dc3bf-af81-43f4-94fb-5afc6b24b159
17 votes -
The lost history of socialism’s DIY computer
23 votes -
The Great Suspender and the problem of malware being introduced into open-source browser extensions
15 votes -
How do I give proper credits in a documentation site
I'm currently working on a site for learning MonoGame: https://learn-monogame.github.io/. The front page alone is a collaboration between 3 people. Do you guys know of a good way to give credits...
I'm currently working on a site for learning MonoGame: https://learn-monogame.github.io/. The front page alone is a collaboration between 3 people. Do you guys know of a good way to give credits for each page? Is that a good idea? I'm currently thinking of adding a section at the bottom of each page with categories like:
- Written by
- Edited by
- Corrections by
- Brainstormed with
With a link to each contributor's preferred social medial. I'm not sure where to look for inspiration for giving credits in a documentation site.
From a reader's point of view, I think it can be nice to get introduced to members of the MonoGame community. Perhaps check out their released games or the ones they are working on.
5 votes -
WhatsApp and the domestication of users
12 votes -
AWS announces they will create and maintain an Apache-licensed fork of Elasticsearch and Kibana
20 votes -
KeenWrite: Dark themes
4 votes -
Designing a free music notation font for MuseScore
15 votes -
PeerTube v3 : it’s a live, a liiiiive !
23 votes -
Putting food on the table while giving away code
5 votes -
Elasticsearch and Kibana are now business risks
7 votes -
I made a thing: Ode, an open source, self-hosted collaborative document editor
13 votes -
Open-source developer and manager David Recordon named White House Director of Technology
14 votes -
Linux for Apple Silicon effort kicks off
24 votes -
Is Firefox still a good (enough) browser for privacy?
Someone posted this on the privacy subreddit. I also ended up finding this and this after doing a bit of searching. As someone who isn’t in the CS/IT spheres (chemical engineering is my...
Someone posted this on the privacy subreddit. I also ended up finding this and this after doing a bit of searching. As someone who isn’t in the CS/IT spheres (chemical engineering is my background), Firefox has been my go-to browser for awhile, although I’m being made aware of the flaws of Firefox (most of which go over my head) and behavior of Mozilla. What can be done to fix this, especially considering that Firefox is the only FOSS browser with a significant user base?
22 votes -
After 3.5 years of development, Buttplug, the open source intimate haptics controls library, has arrived at its v1 release
21 votes -
Xfce 4.16 released with major changes
17 votes -
On the graying of GNOME
14 votes -
NewPipe: A FOSS alternative to classical YouTube
15 votes -
How and why to use Lynx – the faster web browser
11 votes -
Pine64 December update: The longest one yet
4 votes -
RISC-V International reports another strong year of growth with new technical milestones, educational programs, RISC-V adoption and more
7 votes