brie

joined 2 years ago
[–] brie 3 points 7 months ago

Also, superior depends on the user and use case. One person might find that GIMP has all the tools they actually use in Photoshop, and another might find that the ones they use are missing from GIMP. Without knowing the audience, it's hard to know what they want to hear.

[–] brie 5 points 8 months ago

It's more the other way around. Both distribution on the App Store and through third parties will incur the fee. However, if you don't distribute on third parties, you can stay under Apple's old terms, avoiding the fee. It's a way of monetarily punishing third party app distribution.

[–] brie 11 points 8 months ago

Email subscriptions also sometimes have that, with bonus points for several vague and similar sounding categories, and emails not mentioning what category they're in.

[–] brie 7 points 8 months ago

IIRC the main reason it isn't enabled by default is because >=1080p is only available via DASH. Normally Invidious can just point the client to fetch videos from Google's servers, but for technical reasons DASH requires the Invidious instance to act as a proxy (the client asks the instance for video data, then the instance fetches it from Google and sends it to the client). The net result is that watching 1080p streams requires much more bandwidth from the server.

[–] brie 8 points 8 months ago

As far as I can tell running xz directly should be fine, but for the extra paranoid check the version of the xz-utils package. If it is safe, it will be either less than 5.6.0, or it should be 5.6.1+really5.4.5-1 (xz 5.4.5 with a spoof version number to ensure compromised systems get the update).

[–] brie 5 points 8 months ago

Thanks, edited this into the post (along with the distros listed by LWN)

[–] brie 19 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Amarok has support for managing music on iPods. Rockbox is an alternate operating system which doesn't use the iPod's database, and instead does its own indexing.

[–] brie 4 points 9 months ago (1 children)

The problem is that Apple doesn't accept the responsibility. it's the DMA that's doing this to their customers, not Apple. By vilifying the DMA as harmful to privacy and security, Apple gets to make themselves out to be the good guy. When things get worse, Apple can just blame the DMA again.

[–] brie 6 points 9 months ago

Yeah, that's the more thorough version. My interpretation of the quote was to first search for stupidity, if only to confirm it is not in fact stupidity (but malice).

[–] brie 19 points 9 months ago

Is there a picture of what this actually looks / would look like? Honestly, although it is going down a bad path, it isn't actually all that surprising. Firefox already has sponsored address bar suggestions by default.

[–] brie 2 points 9 months ago

DarkTable sort of works for that, though if I recall correctly the browsing is based on a "library folder" rather than freely browsing. It is very heavily focused around editing photographs.

My recommendation is to combine a decent image editor (eg. GIMP) with a good file manager with image preview.

16
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by brie to c/operating_systems
 

Prior discussion

AFTD: Open Hand Foundation Provides AFTD $600K for FTD Research

IGN: YouTuber The Completionist Responds to Allegations of 'Charity Fraud' Against Him and Open Hand

Karl Jobst: The Completionist's Response is the Worst Thing Ever

TL;DR: Things look incredibly bad. The completionist has practically admitted to misleading donors, and it seems like he is expecting the IRS will get involved (IGN). It also seems he's threatening legal action for slander (Jobst).

The allegation that the money was not donated seems to be true (up until the AFTD donation in November of 2023) (IGN, AFTD). The Completionist has admitted he "made statements potentially implying donations were made when they had not yet been" (IGN). Karl basically states that it isn't a potential implication, but a direct claim that he made, and is additionally is alleging that the way The Completionist benefits from IndieLand constitutes charity fraud (Jobst).

134
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by brie to c/foss
 

Edit: Updated the page with some cleanup and better navigation. It can now be filtered by OS and GUI/CLI.

Making posts for individual apps tends to only make sense when there's some actually notable event that takes place, so I figured why not just make a page that lists most of the open source applications that I use? So here is that listing. The webpage version has a nice table of contents for at a glance viewing; below is the page translated to Markdown, powered by Markdownr:

Writing

Joplin (Notes)

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

I haven't been using it for very long. I used to use Logseq, but I've been finding that the more document/page oriented style of note-taking works better in some cases.

LyX (Math & Documents)

WebsiteSource Code

LyX is, without a doubt the best writing program. That's probably an exaggeration, but I do really like LyX. It's great for math, and even generates HTML; the first version of this page was drafted in LyX.

Saber (Handwriting/Drawing)

Honestly, I don't use this that much, however it does come in handy for writing/drawing on PDFs and for quickly jotting down equations.

Reading

KOReader (PDF/Documents)

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

KOReader has a fairly minimal interface, but is quite versatile. It supports a lot of different document formats (and can also be used as an image viewer).

Tachiyomi (Web Comics)

Not much to say, it reads comics. It even has xkcd.

App Management

App Manager

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

It's rather aptly named.

Aurora Store (Google Play Store)

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

Somewhat ironically, this is only useful for installing apps that aren't on this list. However, it does come in handy if you don't have the Google Play Store.

F-Droid (App Store)

WebsiteSource Code

The quintessential FOSS software center for Android.

Termux (Android Terminal)

Not all software is packaged for Termux, but those that are can be quite handy. For example, Lyx is in the main repositories, and Code-OSS is available in the Termux User Repository

Audio/Video

PipePipe (YouTube)

Source CodeGet from F-Droid

It plays video from YouTube. The non-YouTube services it supports are different, but for those who only use YouTube, the primary differentiator I use it for is the ability to view comment replies.

VLC (Video Player)

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

ViMusic (YouTube Music)

Source CodeGet from F-Droid

A straightforward YouTube Music client. It supports offline playback, though there is no way to get songs cached apart from playing through them. It can also be somewhat feature-bare at times.

Internet

Fennec F-Droid / Firefox (Browser)

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

The quintessential FOSS browser. Well, maybe Chromium is, except everyone and their aunt has made their own proprietary spinoff of that.... On Android in particular, support for addons is a big plus.

K-9 Mail (E-Mail)

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

"Thunderbird for Android" shenanigans aside, it's a nice email client in its own right.

WG Tunnel (Wireguard)

Source CodeGet from F-Droid

It's a Wireguard client for Android. It is mostly quality-of-life features that make it nicer than the official Wireguard client, such as being able to put spaces in tunnel names, search in app exclusion, and being available on F-Droid.

Games

AAAAXY (Platformer)

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

A "simple" platformer. I recommend just trying it and exploring how it works yourself.

Forkyz (Crossword Puzzles)

Source CodeGet from F-Droid

You can play crossword puzzles with this app.

Puzzles

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

A description is obviated by the name; it is a puzzle collection. I'm just going to be blunt and say I don't like most of the puzzles, however there are a few that I do quite like, and I recommend giving each of the sub-games a go.

Shattered Pixel Dungeon

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

A fun roguelike. I'm not very good at the whole "stay alive" bit.

Programming

Code-OSS (Editor)

Source Code

It's VSCode, but without proprietary bits. Telemetry may still be enabled by default, however.

Nim (Language)

WebsiteSource Code

Nim is hands-down my favorite programming language. The documentation is admittedly not the greatest, but it combines a lot of interesting ideas, and it gives a lot of freedom in terms of programming style.

Files

gdu (Disk Usage)

Source Code

It's basically ncdu but in Go. I find that it works better than ncdu on Android/Termux

Syncthing (File Sync)

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

Technically it is intended for file syncing, but I ended up using it for backups for the sake of convenience.

Miscellaneous

Arity (Calculator)

Source CodeGet from F-Droid

It's a calculator. Note: There are two applications on F-Droid. One is “Arity,” the original version, and the other is “ArityCalc,” an updated fork (which is listed here)

Barcode Scanner

Source CodeGet from F-Droid

In addition to the obvious capability of scanning barcodes, it can scan and produce QR codes, Aztec codes, Data Matrix codes, and many types of barcode. Admittedly, there's not much to scan QR codes for, but one (bad?) way I use it is as a lazy way to send a short string to another device.

Bitwarden (Password Manager)

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

It's a password manager.

Krita (Drawing)

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

I must admit, I'm not much of an artist. However, it's pretty good for basic image editing.

Organic Maps

WebsiteSource CodeGet from F-Droid

Maps are based on OpenStreetMap and can be downloaded for offline usage.

PDF Doc Scan

Source CodeGet

Self-explanatorily, it scans documents.

Simple Gallery

Source CodeGet from F-Droid

It's a gallery app. Unfortunately, SimpleMobileTools has been acquired by ZipoApps. Although the F-Droid version will probably not be affected, it doesn't seem likely that they will remain maintained. Hopefully one of the forks will be successful.

Unexpected Keyboard

WebsiteGet from F-Droid

Quite a basic, no-nonsense keyboard. It can take some time to get used to the positioning of the symbols and how to swipe for them.

 

"My neighbor used to brag about his big diesel truck, but he's recently gone green. I think he turned over a new Leaf."

 

Karl Jobst's video

Tl;DR: Funds raised during IndieLand were claimed to be going to charities, which is contradicted by Open Hand's tax filings showing the money never went anywhere.

 

I rebased my Silverblue install yesterday. The most notable change in my opinion is the tweaks to the UI and theming of Gnome 45.

Changeset

 

Are there any FOSS handwriting input methods? I'm looking for something like Gboard's; the closest I've found is Unistroke.

37
Nim v2.0 released (nim-lang.org)
submitted 1 year ago by brie to c/programming
 

I've played around with Nim before, and thought some of the features such as default values were quite helpful, so it's quite nice that 2.0 is now officially released!

 

Source code

This is a very basic Lemmy feed viewer, written in Skew.

It doesn't support much as of yet, but it can view instance/community feeds:

/#/beehaw.org

/#/beehaw.org/c/technology

6
Lemmy Sampler (lemmy-sampler.pages.dev)
submitted 1 year ago by brie to c/programming
 

This is a small project I made to view random posts.

47
submitted 1 year ago by brie to c/creative
 

Alt: Line-art of the beehaw logo, drawn on a hexagonal grid. "Beehaw" is written beneath it.

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