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12 votes
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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 -
NewPipe: A FOSS alternative to classical YouTube
15 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 -
disroot.org (providers of hosted open source services) is getting his emails blocked by Microsoft and wants your help
13 votes -
New Zealand's Ministry of Health has released the source code for the NZ Covid Tracer application on GitHub
10 votes -
New RISC-V CPU claims recordbreaking performance per watt
13 votes -
Teddit: A privacy-friendly Reddit frontend similar to Invidious/Bibliogram/Nitter
18 votes -
Tool for adding trigger warnings to links
6 votes -
OpenStreetMap is having a moment; The billion dollar dataset next door
23 votes -
Librem 5 mass production phone has begun shipping
Announcement Details on the phone itself (Both are the same, the USA refers to supply chain): Libram 5 - $799 Libram 5 USA - $1999 I think it's quite a tell about how much our electronics are...
Details on the phone itself (Both are the same, the USA refers to supply chain):
Libram 5 - $799
Libram 5 USA - $1999I think it's quite a tell about how much our electronics are subsidized by sourcing from inordinately cheap labor compared to the (mostly) German/USA labor for the USA phone.
PureOS itself looks like it could be a decent entrant to breaking the mobile duopoly. The only sticking point for me would be various applications that don't offer browser options (read: 2 factor authentication apps).
12 votes -
Librem 5 mass production phone has begun shipping
9 votes -
JSHint: Watching the ship sink (A lesson on ambiguous licenses)
7 votes -
Guido van Rossum, the Python language's founder, joins Microsoft
13 votes -
Valve put their 'Pressure Vessel' container source for Linux games up on GitLab
14 votes -
Mobilizon, a free-libre federated events and groups platform has launched v1.0
13 votes -
Control Chromecasts from Linux
10 votes -
Burning Knight has gone open source
7 votes -
Free / No IAP / Open Source Puzzle Games for iOS
I play a good deal of Simon Tatham's puzzles (iOS version) and Ordinary Puzzles (which is only one type.) I've spent a good portion of the night trying to find some other open source / free / no...
I play a good deal of Simon Tatham's puzzles (iOS version) and Ordinary Puzzles (which is only one type.)
I've spent a good portion of the night trying to find some other open source / free / no IAP puzzle games, but for the most part I've come up empty.
Anybody know of some treasures out there?
6 votes -
Update: Hacktoberfest is Now Opt-In Only
16 votes -
DigitalOcean's Hacktoberfest hurts open-source maintainers by incentivizing low-quality, unsolicited pull requests
23 votes -
Freetube rewrite with Newpipe-like local API released
7 votes -
Unity Technologies announce 'Open Projects', building games in Unity that are open source
7 votes -
Recommend a self-host, open source URL Shortener
At my day job at a non-for-profit, I direct the digital services and platforms (among other things). One thing that I've seen in my org. is the widespread use of the Bitly URL shortener (free...
At my day job at a non-for-profit, I direct the digital services and platforms (among other things). One thing that I've seen in my org. is the widespread use of the Bitly URL shortener (free plan/tier) for the sharing of our many online and offline campaigns. The myriad departments in the org. for the most part operate quite autonomously, though I can influence the use of digital platforms (at least the majority of the time). I'd like to get away from using Bitly. Would anyone kindly recommend alternatives to Bitly? Self-host and open source options would be preferred, but not required if the price is right (read: low enough for a non-profit).
I've used YOURLs many years ago, and it worked great; did everything that I needed and was straight-forward to install and use. (The only cost was a cheap $5/month Digital Ocean droplet, that I happened to run other things on too.) However, I have also heard of - but never used - the following other options:
So...Are any of the above worth considering (or avoiding)? Are there any other, perhaps better alternatives not listed here? I'd appreciate any suggestions and recommendations! Thanks in advanced!
4 votes -
New open-source test tube rack helps COVID-19 testing lab tame thousands of samples
7 votes -
Spritely - A project to improve the capabilities of the federated social web, from one of the co-authors of the ActivityPub standard
8 votes -
Is there a website to propose/join open source groups?
I'm interested in working on an open source project from scratch with a group of like minded people and curious how to get something like that started. Does anyone know of any websites that...
I'm interested in working on an open source project from scratch with a group of like minded people and curious how to get something like that started. Does anyone know of any websites that facilitate that kind of thing? Like where people might propose an project and others can tentatively join?
12 votes -
How open-source software transformed the business world
6 votes -
KeenWrite: A text editor
12 votes -
Where’s the Yelp for open-source tools?
12 votes -
Arm officially supports Panfrost Open-Source Mali GPU driver development
7 votes -
Canonical CEO Mark Shuttleworth makes peace with Ubuntu Linux community
11 votes