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40 votes
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Dipping my toes in OpenBSD, in Amsterdam
15 votes -
Ploopy Classic 2 open source trackball
13 votes -
LocalSend: a free, open-source, cross-platform app to share files to nearby devices
62 votes -
Please stop externalizing your costs directly into my face
121 votes -
Introducing two new PebbleOS watches!
57 votes -
Apple restricts Pebble from being awesome with iPhones
46 votes -
FOSS infrastructure is under attack by AI companies
39 votes -
The unbrickable pledge
12 votes -
TRMNL - Open source e-ink "companion" device
52 votes -
San Francisco unveils marble bust of Aaron Swartz, hero of open-access internet
48 votes -
WikiTok
53 votes -
Why and how I use Immich
16 votes -
We're bringing Pebble back!
80 votes -
Dillo 3.2 celebrates the browser's 25th anniversary
10 votes -
Announcing Supporters of Chromium-based browsers
22 votes -
Matt Mullenweg deactivates WordPress accounts of contributors planning a fork
55 votes -
From where I left off (antirez returns to Redis)
6 votes -
Tips for increasing online privacy (without going insane)?
I've been researching internet privacy and fell down the rabbit hole of...well, internet privacy. I started with deleting Facebook/Instagram and switching to fire fox + plugins. I would like to...
I've been researching internet privacy and fell down the rabbit hole of...well, internet privacy. I started with deleting Facebook/Instagram and switching to fire fox + plugins. I would like to make more improvements but I really have no idea how, it started with deleting socials and next thing you know I'm looking at LineageOS and de-googling.
If anyone has any suggestions on where to go next while staying realistic/not going crazy, i would love to hear them. I am not really sure where to set my expectations, basically I would like to have more control of my data. The other day Google photos gave me a memory recap which kind of creeped me out! I am suddenly not fond of whatever is going on under the surface of Google photos that's making collages and trying to sell my photo books. Also g-board giving me a pop up in the text prediction row asking me to rate the app??? Ew.
I am a fan of self hosting and run a small NAS (open media vault) but this too quickly turns into the privacy spiral and leaves me thinking I should throw my phone into a river and live in the forest. Would love to hear your thoughts/advice/opinions!
54 votes -
With Core One, Prusa's open source hardware dream quietly dies
22 votes -
Relativty — an open-source VR headset
32 votes -
NGI Mobifree grants awarded for fair mobile software
6 votes -
Phonetic matching
10 votes -
Omnivore alternatives?
I created an Omnivore account recently and I started to love it. I thought to self-host it but I didn't have enough time and thought I'd host it later. I (along with everyone else presumably) got...
I created an Omnivore account recently and I started to love it. I thought to self-host it but I didn't have enough time and thought I'd host it later.
I (along with everyone else presumably) got this email today:
We’re excited to share that Omnivore is joining forces with ElevenLabs, the leading AI audio research and technology company. Our team is joining ElevenLabs to help drive the future of accessible reading and listening with their new ElevenReader app.
Next, all Omnivore users will be able to export their information from the service through November 15 2024, after which all information will be deleted.
Though it is quite frustrating, I will not go further in my opinion of this move.
I would just like to let the community know that I'm in the market for an alternative for this... or maybe some help how to self-host it. I don't even know if it will be easy to self-host or if it will be worth it, presumably without updates...
19 votes -
Bitwarden switches password manager and SDK to GPL3 after FOSS-iness drama
54 votes -
AAA gaming on Asahi Linux [Linux distribution ported to Apple Silicon Macs]
23 votes -
The Stallman report
38 votes -
Big changes are coming to ArchiveBox!
10 votes -
Announcing FLOSS/fund: $1M per year for free and open source projects
18 votes -
Open source is neither a community nor a democracy
27 votes -
Zerowriter Ink
23 votes -
Mozilla grants Ente $100k
31 votes -
Time as a grid
20 votes -
Arch Linux and Valve collaboration
49 votes -
KDE Akademy 2024 - The Akademy of many changes
6 votes -
Living in times of technical feudalism
6 votes -
The Open Source Hardware Association needs your help
15 votes -
Sustainability of FOSS: The Next Generation Internet ecosystem
14 votes -
So you want to compete with or replace open source
26 votes -
FOSS funding vanishes from EU's 2025 Horizon program plans. Elimination of most Next Generation Internet funding 'incomprehensible,' says OW2 CEO Pierre-Yves Gibello.
28 votes -
The best robot vacuum for me is the one I hacked
32 votes -
Announcing the Ladybird Browser Initiative
54 votes -
Thirty years later, FreeDOS is still keeping the dream of the command prompt alive
18 votes -
FreeDOS open-source text-based OS turns 30, still in active development and primarily used for retro gaming
13 votes -
The day AppGet died
40 votes -
Polyfill supply chain attack hits 100K+ sites
45 votes -
Minimalist Android launcher recommendations
Currently, I'm using the Aero launcher, and I really like having all the names of my apps listed out, but if I could have something with a to do list and then swipe for apps, it would be kind of...
Currently, I'm using the Aero launcher, and I really like having all the names of my apps listed out, but if I could have something with a to do list and then swipe for apps, it would be kind of neat.
Other wish list functions:
- Folders for Apps.
- Able to add PWA or a URL to a list of apps.
- Start a search from searching through all apps.
- Corner widgets/shortcuts
- A pony!
Willing to poke around if there is an open source project I can add stuff too.
24 votes -
“It can’t be that easy, right?” (a Linux desktop environment appreciation post)
I daily drive Pop!_OS, which uses the GNOME desktop environment. I know that DEs are a hotly contested space among Linux users, and my use of GNOME wasn’t so much a choice as it was a default:...
I daily drive Pop!_OS, which uses the GNOME desktop environment. I know that DEs are a hotly contested space among Linux users, and my use of GNOME wasn’t so much a choice as it was a default: it’s what came with my distro.
I like GNOME. I don’t really understand the hate it often gets, but I also don’t really have the legacy understanding of Linux that a lot of people do, and it seems like a lot of distaste lies there. I’m as casual a user as they come — Linux for me is like a Chromebook: it “just works” in that I pretty much need it to get me online and manage some documents. (I do also play games on it, for which Steam and Proton have been a huge boon.)
I also have a Steam Deck, and it uses KDE’s Plasma on the desktop side, so I got to see what that was like. I also like KDE. It’s very different from GNOME, but I can see the appeal. It feels more like Windows but also has a lot of little nice touches and additions. Also, no ads.
This got me thinking: what if I tried using KDE instead of GNOME on my laptop?
I assumed that this would be a big deal. Like, I would have to completely gut my distribution, or reinstall it fresh. Multiple hours of work. Lots of preparation. Looking up myriad terminal commands I don’t understand and hoping they do what they’re supposed to, because if they don’t I’m really screwed — as soon as something goes wrong “under the hood” I’m dead in the water when it comes to fixing it.
But I was looking on System76’s support site and they made it seem super simple. A single terminal command to install the whole DE?
It can’t be that easy, right?
I am astonished to say that it WAS.
I ran the command, had to select between
gdm3andsddm(a choice which I didn’t understand at all so I searched around a bit before just going with the default: gdm3), and then rebooted.I can now select between GNOME and KDE on the login screen, and both work flawlessly. It was so easy.
I don’t know who to credit for this. Did System76 do a great job of making this easy on their distro? Did the KDE team work hard to make their DE effortlessly plug-and-play? Is this just a general product of the way Linux handles its different components?
I don’t know but I’m willing to spread the love around to anyone and everyone who contributes to Linux and all of its facets. It’s wild to me that I can so easily reskin my entire operating system in the same way that I used to do with Winamp back in the day. I keep waiting for something to go wrong, but after a few days of this, I’ve realized that everything still “just works,” automagically.
A big thanks here to anyone who has a hand in open-source software and making computing better for people like me, who have (mostly) no idea what they’re doing.
56 votes -
New AI project aims to mimic the human neocortex: The Thousand Brains Project offers a fundamentally different approach to AI
19 votes -
ArcFox, an opensource project to make Firefox flow like Arc browser
33 votes