What is your favorite open source software?
What is your favorite open source software?
What is your favorite open source software?
I love and use Bitwarden daily.
There something I don't understand. How does one use Bitwarden daily? It generates, remembers and autofill passwords, right? I rarely enter a password anywhere. What am I missing? Please educate me.
There are certain sites which terminate your sessions after a while. For example, banking sites or most government portals. In such situations, the auto fill function is very handy.
Like the other commenter said, I use it for sites that tend to sign me out after a few hours. I also use it for work things that sign out every session.
I auto wipe cookies all on every browser close so that gets more use.
Way way late to this, but I'll also say: Firefox and other privacy-focused browsers have an option to delete all of your browsing history and cookies when you close the browser, which also logs you out of anything you were using. It's a good practice if you're being mindful of how much tracking data you are letting be collected from you.
I knew about Bitwarden, but I thought how could a cloud based thing be truly open source, but they actually do have their backend on GitHub 🤯
I also love bitwarden daily ;)
I also love bitwarden daily ;)
Firefox and its derivatives. They're the last free bastion preventing a Chromium monopoly on the browser market, which is hugely important - especially these days with Google's push for Mv3.
Signal, Thunderbird and Bitwarden
I didn't know thunderbird was open source!
Yup, it's the nephew, so to speak, of Firefox!
that's cool that others also love open source. these three right here are 🔥
Ill throw in some obscure ones I use daily.
omg, stemroller sounds amazing!
Stemroller sounds insane.
Just downloaded and tried StemRoller. Definitely impressed, I'd say it works marginally better than any of the "free" (aka trial version, need to pay for full features) stem separators I've tried online, so very happy to find this!
Those I’ll need to check especially the vst host. Nice :)
These two links might single handedly change my life. Many thanks!!
Both of these sound interesting, though I can't really think of a use for running vsts without a DAW. For a moment I thought it would be nice to play synth without opening a daw, but if I decide to record something I played I have to set it all up again.
I use Ampsims nearly exclusively. When I'm practising or just noodling I don't have any intention to record. Carla has a much smaller footprint than a standard DAW, and therefore less energy usage.
Keep in mind I'm a string instrument player primarily. I don't play with synths or anything like that.
Firefox. It is the only thing keeping Google from total internet domination
Blender by a huge mile. Yes, there’s tons of other software like Linux, of course, but Blender is such a powerful, well managed, economically viable and healthy (community) project that it should be shown as an example of how Open Source should be.
My biggest hurdle with other projects is the fanboys, because many times they’re quite toxic, insulting everybody who doesn’t adore the project and don’t accept constructive criticism.
By a huuuge mile indeed. Blender devs are great at listening and communicating with the community.
The standardization of hotkeys and features across the software is fantastic. The UI is snappy and filled to the brim with intuitive QoL features I wish were standard for my OS.
I have irreconcilable grievances with a lot of open source software, VLC, VSCode, etc, and find development slow and heading non optimal for others like Sharex and Firefox... but Blender, that's green on all fronts.
Blender is the model open source project :P
uBlock Origin, it's not even close!
GNU+Linux
Firefox, Thunder, LibreOffice, Kdenlive, Audacity on GNU+Linux .... (I'm no pro which is why I'm on Ubuntu but even still, I haven't paid for software in years)
Firefox and Bitwarden
LibreOffice is equal to any office software out there, and has been much more stable than OpenOffice, and works without an internet connection unlike Google Docs.
I'd go with either Firefox or Thunderbird. Both are immensely useful pieces of software that I use on a daily basis, and have evolved (mostly) nicely over time.
Not to give Mozilla too much credit, Nextcloud is also pretty slick!
uBlock Origin - the chaddest AdBlock of them all!
Proxmox, opnsense, fdroid, and many more on r/selfhosted (now on lemmy also) .
sunshine, moonlight ( play my games anywhere in the world, games run on my pc at home)
Firefox (the best browser against google monopoly), thunderbird (best mail client)
LineageOS, microG, Mozilla Location services, Magisk, aurora store (let me use Android without any of google tracking)
Bitwarden, Proton mail/vpn, Nextcloud (finally no gmail tracking)
Jellyfin, kodi (lets me create my own Netflix)
GNU/Linux, GNOME, KDE and host of other Linux projects. No more windows tracking. Also if you want to really know how the OS works, you should start tinkering with Linux. I expanded my knowledge base by just using Linux as daily driver.
The list just goes on and on. I am so grateful for all the open source devs that put their time in developing these tools.
For those wanting to go further, checkout https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted
It's Lemmy you fools. It's always been Lemmy.
Not by importance. Obviously that would be the Linux kernel, GCC and GNU coreutils, and the Firefox web browser, among some other foundational things (code to run my desktop GUI, for example).
So, I'll say my favorite is PCSX2. Ever since they got rid of the ancient plugin architecture this emulator has been getting sooooooo much better, and it was already great! I would add other top tier emulators like Dolphin, DuckStation, SNES9X, SameBoy, and so on. I just love emulators :)
Not one per se, but I love when a piece of open source software absolutely destroys it's competition. I'm not talking Firefox vs. Chrome or Unity vs. Godot debate (both are better, don't @ me), I'm talking when it's not even close, the open alternative is just industry standard.
VLC, Calibre, OBS and Blender come to mind.
I've used Calibre for so long, it's just a great piece of software
Has Blender become industry standard yet? Last time I looked (a couple of years ago?) the big commercial ones, at least Maya and Houdini, were still the industry standard. Not to take anything away from Blender though. It's an amazing piece of software, gaining ground quickly, and would be my choice for doing 3D. However, I'm not in industry, and I had read back then from industry folks that Blender was still lacking in some areas. Some of it may have just been inertia on the part of large organizations that used the commercial software though.
ytdlp and mpv also comes to mind. Pretty much all terminal emulators are FOSS too.
How about the fact that a large majority of the internet and cloud services run on Linux powered systems
If i had to go with just one the linux
Home Assistant, a powerful home automation platform.
HA is still more of a lifestyle choice than just software.
Someday I'll get around to putting those bulbs back on the Homekit controller instead of trying to run them through OTBR.
The exhaust fan turning on when the litterbox detects a cat is pretty cool though.
Can you do voice activation with this? I am using google home it works pretty well, but I'd like to move to a more custom setup. But I need voice activation. It's so nice just talking.
You can actually still use google Home if you want to - it integrates well with Google Home and Alexa but is currently massively expanding their own voice assistant option.
Home Assistant is more a "background" integrator - it links up all you different smart home options, makes them thereby smarter and adds external data (e.g. weather, traffic,etc.) whenever you want. And of course enables you to easily add your own visualisation and your own automations.
It is on one side incredibly easy to "start". And on the other side incredibly powerful.
Philpo explained it well.
I’m currently using Home Assistant as my integration platform to talk to everything, and as an automation engine to make things happen.
Home Assistant can then expose your devices to other platforms like Apple HomeKit and Google Home.
For controlling things manually, I mostly use the Apple Home app, and Siri and Google Assistant for voice control.
This year the Home Assistant developers are focusing heavily on building out native and local voice control. There will be an announcement in a week on their progress. It looks like they will be announcing the ability to use wake works to activate voice commands (like Google/Siri/Alexa but all done without compromising your privacy).
Newpipe, tor, keepass xc , syncthing and KDE connect
Blender, don't even use it that much but I love it
My favorites based on usage:
Genuine question because I've used winrar forever. Why 7zip over winrar?
Do people really still use WinRar? I thought that was a relic of the old internet.
WinRAR is simply obsoleted by 7zip. Or does everything WinRAR does and more. In my case, I particularly use their context menu shortcut for checking sha256 file hash
They can all serve the same purpose. The advantages of 7zip are the following:
You don't have to pay for the license /s
I use a lot of Open Source software at home but Home Assistant is by far the most used, although mostly it's doing its automations in the background without me having to think about it.
Home Assistant is not only extremely useful, extremely good, but I've loved contributing to it: it's so cool being able to develop a new integration and control your actual devices with it!
Git itself.
Which allowed this monstosity I contributed heavily to, to leave a hellscape of svn patches: https://github.com/LandSandBoat/server
So git earns the "favorite" designation hands down.
Blender. Probably one of the best pieces of software I've used ever.
So many to choose from...Linux, Syncthing, Vim, Firefox and Thunderbird/K-9 Mail, Keepass and derivatives, GrapheneOS, Inkscape, VLC/mpv, yt-dlp...there are just too many daily drivers to name them all.
vim, neovim and a bunch of plugins. It's such a great productivity booster, I am using it daily for SW development.
I'm convinced anyone who doesn't say emacs is simply just more productive than me
Maybe on the short term but damn, that M-x butterflies is a time saver.
Notepad++ is the first tolerable for me text editor since msedit.com and notepad.exe
It has won the fruitless text editor war for me, at last !
Right now it's Proton. The work that has been done to makengaming possible on Linux is astounding!
Firefox I think is actually the best browser totally independent of technological ethics issues. Started using it because I was on 2GB RAM at the time and Chrome was much more RAM-intensive (apparently this is reversed now,) and I've never looked back.
I think I'll go with GIMP: it's such a well made tool and for 99% of use cases is a valid alternative to professional photo editing suites
SQLite. Probably the most widely used open-source library in the world. Pretty much every computer, phone, tablet, and a lot of embedded systems, all use it.
7-zip, Firefox, VLC player
We definitely need Blender in the mix as well!
Also Signal, Bitwarden and Firefox.
NVDA. Without it I literally couldn't use my computer every day, or do my job.
7zip is such an easy pick, its almost the default option lol
Haven't seen Inkscape here yet. I use it for almost every image editing thing I regularly do like cropping, stitching together, adding text and of course creating graphics from scratch.
That and Gimp together are excellent.
Definitely GIMP .... for any kind of simple quick photoshopping once you get accustomed to GIMP, it just works for about 80 percent of everything you want to do with an image ... yes there is a bit of a learning curve but its the image editor I use the most often
qBittorrent came to my rescue after uTorrent went commercial.
Freecad is pretty powerful, and fully functional now that they figured out their topological naming problem.
How does it compare to OpenSCad?
Openscad is all text based. Freecad is more like conventional cad software like fusion 360. Honestly I don't even know how people can use Openscad lol.
God. I hatelove FreeCAD so much. As someone coming from the Autodesk/Fusion360 world it is so incredibly clunky and unrounded.
And on the other side so incredibly powerful and flexible.
Argh. Argh.
I really have to figure it out better.
They finally did it?? I was using the thunder-something fork for a while because of that, but I always prefer sticking with the base project if I can.
It's largely mitigated in the newest version. I also used that branch. I don't know if maybe they folded that branch in to the main or what.
Edit (forgot):
In terms of overall usage, gotta go GIMP.
BitWarden and Homebridge.
Most used for me is Firefox (in fact I'm so used to it, it didn't even come to mind until I saw so many replies mentioning it!).
The favorite is probably git.
For the recently discovered stuff that would probably be the Astro frontend framework (and Svelte).
Also what a wonderful thread to discover stuff. Thank you all! ::: spoiler spoiler Also my first ever comment on Lemmy. 😎 :::
in terms of time I spend in it:
Throw in Git and that's me.
FFmpeg
Are we only counting FOSS or would Doom count? If Doom counts, my pick is Doom. Having access to Doom's source code is where I learned a huge majority of my programming knowledge making mods for it.
Tachiyomi.
I love that app when I have a phone. I broke my phone tho so now I've been using Komikku
I love how polished it feels.
Great app that I practically use every day.
I have tried using a couple of the forks, but always end up returning to the original.
I like a bunch of OSS projects but Firefox is way up there above the rest.
Since major projects like Firefox keep getting mentioned, I’ll throw a shout out to Ant Renamer.
It’s simple, it’s FOSS, and it just works. I often - ahem - acquire a number of files from various sources that are labeled like “Mission.Impossible.7.Complete.zHD.2022.xReloadedx”, and an application like Ant Renamer can batch rename files into whatever you need.
For example, if I need to backup or copy a set of game saves in a folder that all need to have the same prefix like N007 from N002, I would have to manually change 10K files from one prefix to the other. Ant Renamer can do everything in a batch that runs quicker than the blink of an eye.
So, Ant Renamer for the win!
On that note there's a teeny tiny bash script called vimv, which enables you to rename a list of files in vim!
It's absolutely glorious, but don't switch lines around or delete them, it's really simple, comes with the full power of vim and doesn't protect you from yourself ;)
Libre Office
Gnome 44, (probably gonna get roasted by Gentoo users) Nano, Librewolf, Free tube, NixOS, Gnu utils, Krita, kdenlive, Gimp Nuclear, Shredder, Gnome disks, Qemu/KVM
Edit- and test disk, it saved my ass this week. I accidentally wrote a new partion table over my hdd that had all my family photos. Used testdisk let it run on my laptop for 22hours recovered all photos and files. Shout out to the Devs for make great FOSS software
Vlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media playerVlc media player
Linux and GNU too :p
Lemmy
Vaultwarden
No love for VLC player?!?
Linux, Firefox based browsers, vs code, KDE, and the fediverse.
Firefox and Nethack
Do you have any recommendations for how to get into NetHack? I've tried playing it in the past but it seems a bit obscure and incomprehensible to me.
We have the same experience then XD
In my experience, the learning curve felt similar to Dwarf Fortress.
For starters, there's the Guidebook and the Wiki.
You probably also want to keep a Keyboard Reference handy.
This guy has a full run you can watch,(or not, that's LOOONG)
For me, I think it was just a combination of watching people play and banging my head against it until things start to sort of make sense. Kind of like dwarf fortress lol.
Firefox, probably. Though Heroic Games Launcher is getting there real fast. And currently I very often use Baby Journal, though it's an app I wrote, so I'm not sure I can really call it "favorite", but it's definitely one of my most used FOSS apps currently.
Is Android a valid answer? Maybe not Google's monstrosity but AOSP (although I feel as though it's hard to extricate one from the other save for projects like GrapheneOS).
gnu
I'm only going to mention desktop software, there's too many tools and layers involved in spinning up a server.
Daily use (most used first):
It's a pretty boring list: connectivity tools, text editors, and version control are placed front and centre. That said they are great tools and I would hate to live in a world where I was limited to only proprietary products
Stuff I wish I had more time to use:
Special mention:
Going by what I use the most: Firefox, git, less, tailscale, midnight commander
If I had to pick only one artifact's worth: bash
, probably.
Otherwise:
bash
vim
urxvt
pacman
nix
iptables
(-ng
)/ebtables
parallel
jq
Honestly probably neko my friends and I used to love rabbit but it went to shit
Firefox, VLC, LibreOffice
Os: Linux mint, Solus, endeavour Programs: librewolf, freetube
I don't have "one" favourite but these are up there
firefox and lemmy I guess
Linux, Firefox, PeerTube
mpv.io !
I discovered it before covid, and it is really lightweight and customizable. So many plug-ins, and they're so simple to create.
I was usually having issues with VLC or settings that he didn't have. No issues with mpv, so far.
The Linux Kernel and operating system in general. It is simultaneously my favorite and I hate that it killed my prior favorite, the SGI Irix operating system. I was there at the beginning, from kernel 1.1 through today. I remember telling regional directors at silicon graphics that Linux was the future and them disparaging that opinion.
Emacs, tor, mpv, KDE, f-droid, python, qemu
Yggdrasil, an IPv6 end to end encrypted networking proof of concept. There's something about it that I find so innovative that I want it to succeed so badly !
Firefox, GNU Linux, VLC, GIMP, Krita, Blender (even if I didn't used it that much), Lemmy of course with it's different FOSS clients
Blender, by far :)
Linux, Firefox, Bitwarden, Android
I got sick of corporations forcing restrictions so looked into alternatives. Learned how to do it myself & haven't looked back:
Joplin notes - use this every day synced to multiple devices Nextcloud - self hosted on a Raspberry Pi 4. Cloud storage plus syncs multiple stuff including Joplin
So many brilliant options on mobile: OsmAnd+ (nav), Antennapod (podcasts), Keepass (password manager), Obtainium (app updater). Was also enjoying Fritter/Quacker (Twitter without needing an account) until Elons recent meltdown. Also enjoying Liftoff lemmy app for Android
EDIT: hot off the press. For those interested, Quacker is back in the game. Not had chance to check Fritter yet
how much can your rasp pi hold what?
Yeah I just use a HDD. On the whole its pretty stable though through tinkering Ive managed to crash my setup a few times. Sometimes restarting the Nextcloud Docker container is enough (Portainer makes it simple), when i really break it i start from scratch. I use a simple script to automaticacally back up all my data to another drive weekly
You don't have to use an SD card for the storage lol, you can connect hard drives to a pi.
Blender
Subsurface
Its dive planning and dive logging software. It's also the only software I'm aware of that can actually pull the data from my dive computer, which uses some crappy proprietary cable and software. The fact that subsurface exists and is automatically in Linux repositories is what finally allowed me wipe out my aging and barely functioning computer, and revive it with Linux.
Linux, MPV, Proton, bash, Newpipe
Hyprland So much fun
Godot game engine without a doubt.
OsmAnd
Not entirely software, but the MiSTer FPGA project. Having accurate zero-lag hardware accurate versions of almost every console, many arcade games, PCs (Amiga, Commodore etc), and handheld up to and including the PlayStation in a box the size of a game boy is unreal.
Majority of the project is open source, and has been used for ports to the analogue pocket handheld, which I also have and use often
Sonarr, Radarr, Lidarr, Readarr, and Prowlarr.
archlinux firefox thunderbird emacs
Gotta go with python here, though vim would be a close second.
Infinitime, for my PineTime.
Pihole, Kubernetes, ffmpeg, VLC, pretty much we are so technologically advanced because there is so much free and open source software. If it wasn't for it we would be ages behind technologically.
A few of mine that I use daily...
Networky Things:
A couple of personal projects:
I couldn't get by without AutoHotkey and AltSnap. Especially having extra buttons on my mouse, there's so many custom shortcuts, commands, controls, etc. that I couldn't make without them. AltSnap also has a built-in borderless windowed button that works better with games than some apps I have used that are explicitly for that purpose. I have shortcuts for changing volume, switching windows, toggling always-on-top, and even making windows transparent all from the mouse.
youtube-dl
Freecad. It's a little rough to use compared to professional cad products I've used but it can really do a lot. In a lot of ways it feels less constrained than some of the stuff I've used too
KDE Plasma desktop
I'unno. Don't really think about it that hard.
I guess firefox, since it gives me porn access to websites.
OBS is my one of my favorite softwares in general, let alone open source
Firefox, Libreoffice, and Bitwarden (I would include Zotero, but idk if it's open source)
Debian
I’ve been using Logseq after trying Notion and Obsidian a good bit and I’m really enjoying it. It’s a block-based note app that makes connecting thoughts together super easy. So far so goo!
Looks interesting, but is it open source? Looking at the jobs page it looks like a great place to work, but it blows my mind that still only offer 2 weeks off.
They say it’s open source on their main page and link to their Github. I haven’t personally vetted that fact, but I’ve yet to hear anything to the contrary so I believe it.
GNU Hurd. Never used it, but I like the idea and would love to see it become a viable option.
Android and Linux
aosp and linux
Wine, despite the headache that is fiddling with its configurations for specific older games to work.
Dolphin Emulator always amazes me in how perfect of an emulator it is.
Since most of what I would have said has already be mentioned I will just go with almost anything under the umbrella of the KDE organization.
As in the Plasma desktop environment and the whole application suite. Includes programs like Krita, Kdenlive and KDE Connect, plus the whole range of "standard" desktop applications like terminal, file manager, document viewers, etc. pp.
And the DE itself is just adorably hackable. Want to replace the Kwin window manager with i3? Sure it's possible, here you go: https://userbase.kde.org/Tutorials/Using_Other_Window_Managers_with_Plasma
Bitwarden & Jellyfin
linux, godot, blender, neural amp modeler
Ardour
Voyager, Firefox, Tachiyomi (J2K specifically), Bitwarden, Jellyfin and Findroid, Sonarr, LunaSea...there's so much I can't pick.
In terms of what I use daily
Pandoc, KeepassXC, NeoVim
Would probably say Firefox, but since many others have already mentioned it, I'll go with Nushell
Didnt know Nushell, but that looks better than cmder! Will give it a try.
woah nushell + starship through emacs vterm on a gentoo machine running a risc-v oreboot chip. (the last one isn't real unfortunately)
Suckless software like dwm, st, dmenu
Favorite? Hm... I would have to say Codeigniter (PHP framework) but I love these projects as well: Linux/GNU, VLC, LibreOffice, qBittorrent, VSCodium, Filezilla, GIMP, Firefox, Wireguard, GrapheneOS, Matrix, F-Droid.
If I won the lottery I'd donate to these projects or their respective foundations.
Thunderbird. Hasn't bugged on me once.
Firefox, Bitwarden, and Tachiyomi are some that I use almost everyday
OpenSCAD and Gitlab. I can quickly iterate on designs through code, push it to my Gitlab instance, and have my CI/CD pipelines pick it up, render it, and automatically slice it in some common profiles to send to Octoprint
I asked the same question about OpenSCad from a dude recommending FreeCad, but how does it compare to FreeCad?
Very different. I haven't used FreeCAD much but it is far more visual and full-featured (I believe it even has some simulation features for moving parts) where OpenSCAD is really just primitive shapes and scripting but for my workflows (mostly creating 3D printed parts) it works well
rust
Bitwarden, NetNewsWire, Firefox
Arch Linux, LibreWolf & KeepassXC are the first that come to mind.
Speaking of LibreWolf, how do you get it to work on banking websites? I cant login and have to use Firefox.
PayPal works for me. Maybe you can find a solution here: https://librewolf.net/docs/faq/ The easiest solution would probably be to use Firefox + uBlockOrigin for banking and LibreWolf for everything else. Otherwise you can find user-made "about:config" files to harden Firefox' security and privacy.
Favourite, not sure. Maybe my "favourite" would be the one which would be the hardest to replace with something I like.
There wouldn't be something i can think off that could be irreplaceable. However the hardest thing I like may be FanControl.
For the browser, Firefox is very nice, but it's "just" a browser if you think about it. There is brave, and other open source chromium alternatives if it disappears.
For mail clients, I also like the Mailspring design, however Thunderbird just got a new skin and damn it looks good too.
And for the rest, I don't really know. Either I don't remember right now, or no special "like" for the software. Or I like the closed source software convenience more (I may also have no idea of an open source alternative, or an equivalent in features open source).
It depends on the usage really.
Unfortunately, FanControl is not open source. It uses librehardwaremonitor which is, but the FanControl project does not have source code posted and is not under a FOSS license.
Openhardwaremonitor is the best and most direct competitor to cpuid hwmonitor
Linux
Playnite, all your games in one launcher.
Playnite is incredible and the dev is a total beast. god among men
An awesome piece of software
Even with emulator support.
Its incredible
I want to love Playnite, but it's just so slow for me.
Ditto ffmpeg gstreamer obs Firefox & addons Thunderbird greenshot everythingtoolbar 7zip Lemmy jerboa and so many more OpenWRT simply a must, eartrumpet gajim conversations
Firefox, Neovim, Pass (password store) and Wezterm. I heavily use all four of them.
I also need to give a special mention to Aegis Authenticator on Android.
Godot!
linux
Linux
Linux, Tor, and the Ballistica game engine/BombSquad game (not fully open source as stuff used for sensitive data remains closed source 😔)
Edit: forgot git lol
vim
I’ve been liking Digikam and Rawtherapee (which is an awful name for the record) for photo gubbins.
Rawtherapee
I'm a darktable guy myself. I have tried Rawtherapee and was even an exclusive user of Art (RT fork) for a while, but darktable has everything I need in one package.
I’ve only just discovered Darktable, so I was a bit reticent to call it one of my favourites, but for the relatively minimal editing I actually do, it does seem to be pretty ideal. I only use Digikam for organisational stuff really - do you find that Darktable’s filing/cataloguing ability is good enough that you only use the one program?
Currently OBS and Motrix
Definitely OpenFOAM. It competes with commercial software that costs thousands of dollars.
Suricata
Neovim. It's an awesome editor and it has a great community and ecosystem.
Linux, Firefox, OBS, Emacs, Hatari
Hard to answer but maybe Haiku or GNU Emacs
QGIS and OpenStreetMap for mapping
Linux, of course. But another one that I use all the time, and love to death, is SageMath. It's the perfect blend of mathematics and programming for me.
For games:
For non-games:
I'd include something like Linux, but I personally feel that's kinda cheating because of how large it is compared to the others.
Right now, it's Warpinator. Makes at-home wireless file transfers so damn SIMPLE.
Linux, Firefox, Apache
Helix text editor.
I was looking to see if someone mentioned Helix. It has good defaults and useful features integrated out of the box.
Mi favorito que uso todos los días y no entiendo que no lo use todo el mundo es : thunderbird
My favorite that I use every day and I don't understand why not everyone uses it is: thunderbird
ShareX and it isn't even close
Uptime Kuma is a fantastic selfhosted status page system. You can use it to track and notify you of network outages or it can scrape a url for a key word and alert you when it's found. I've heard people using the keyword feature to find out when RPI go back in stock for example.
I use it at work to keep track of our systems and their uptime as well as cloud systems we use.
NetHack!
ReVanced. I love my ad-free, sponsor-blocking, Shorts-removing YouTube experience.
As a bonus, I also enjoy using Mp3tag. It's a program I can use to easily change and update the tags on all my music files, and it can even do it all in batches. It can also connect to various music services (Discogs, Musicbrainz, etc.) to get music tag info directly so you don't have to type it all in manually.
I'm getting a lot of use from Syncplay recently
Qemu/kvm
paperless-ngx
Bulk Crap Uninstaller
Media Player Classic (I'm unsure if the latest iterations are or even if the Home Cinema edition is open source), TOR, qbittorrent, firefox, thinderbird, obs to name a few that I use regularly.
VS Code
yay
uhh probably uhh AOSP and calyx os
I have used a lot of stuff over the years but my favorite would have to be a little command line program called cowsay. It takes whatever text you feed it and puts it in a speech bubble above a cow, hence the name.
Combine that with fortune and throw it in your bash script and you get a new message every time you open terminal.
I really like wazuh. Its such a well put together product and feels like enterprise software. One of the best cyber security tools there is.
At my left hand, Pulovers Macro Creator runs on my tablet pc 24/7.
oh and grapheneos!!!
Linux,KDE,Bitcoin,F-droid and everything built around them.
GCC, back in the days DJGPP in particular. As a child in the 1990s I could not afford the big name compilers like Watcom. And compared to DJGPP, all the “prized” Borland/Turbo stuff that my middle school pushed (with segmented real mode), were practically Fisher-Price and Mattel compilers.
Node Red
I really like to use Shotcut for video editing and Audacity for audio related things.
I'll skip all the already mentioned ones and go for a less known one, EasyTag.
I used it to organise the tags in my music collection. Super useful as you can batch fill in tags based on file structure (like author/album/song) or do the reverse and sort files in a file structure based on tags.
Keepass and firefox expansion Firefox of course Ninite to install and update software Newpipe / yt vanced : youtube alternatives obsidian : note taking (not sure if this is technically open source)
Barrier KVM RustDesk Bitwarden
As a music hoarder and RYM nerd, I'd have to say the entire MusicBrainz ecosystem, from the service itself to the tagger.
doas pacman -Syu (arch)
doas emerge -avuDN @world (gentoo)
Dungeon Crawl Stone Soup!
date-fns for saving my sanity when working with dates in JavaScript.
Neovim(astronvim ftw), Firefox,
Posting before reading because activity. Godot Engine, hands down. I used Unity for years and years and now that Godot 4.x is out, I'll probably never use Unity again. Unless it's for a job or something like that. All personal projects tho... I could probably make a game in Godot while waiting for Unity to start up.
OBS Had to do some simple broadcasting at work and was surprised when I found OBS and all the features it had, all for free.
Qgis, Firefox! Comes top of mind
What an extremely hard question to answer, but I would probably go with Firefox.
MapTool! It's my virtual table top of choice. :)
How can it be one? GNU/Linux, Firefox, EMACS, Ardour, Vitalium, SurgeXT, KX Studio (OK, this is repo), Carla, Gnome, Debian, MX Linux, XFCE, KDE Plasma, GIMP I am absolutely sure I am missing more s/w packages that I love but don't come to mind.
Librewolf, Wine/Proton, Linux, Zsh, VLC, GIMP, Kdenlive, Bitwarden.
Cygwin. 100%
RetroArch/M64Plus FZ
deleted by creator
Xournal++ is really good for pdf creation/annotation. ✍️
Foss open source, or open source after Stallmans deffinition?
If the first one I'll go for the GNU/Linux OS
would you recommend me to switch from Windows 11, if I mainly watch series on my laptop from large streaming providers? Are all streaming providers supported?
There's essentially an open standard for streaming video so it's not like the old days where you needed to download a platform-specific component to watch streaming video. I use Linux as my primary environment and I can't even remember the last time I had trouble with it; certainly not for several years at least. I've used Netflix, DisneyPlus, Amazon, Paramount+, and probably others.
Just as a heads up, though, if you are using Firefox then the first time you go to any of these sites it will prompt you as to whether you are fine with enable support for DRM video, and you need to click "Yes". This is a one-time thing, though. (It does this because if you are an open source purist then you might not want to do this so it likes to get your permission first; most browsers just assume that you don't care and enable it by default.)
I watch Netflix, HBO and Disney so yes, I'm guessing most are supported.
I mean you can't do anything wrong with it, but you should be ready to troubleshoot and look into it.
I mean how are streaming sites suposed to not work? I don't know about desktop applications, but a browser does the job, so why use a desktop application that doesn't even support an adblocker.
TLDR: You'll be able to watch your shows, but if you want to use GNU/Linux you should look into it a bit.
EDIT: If you consider GNU/Linux I'd strongly recommend becoming familiar with the terminal (no matter which distro you choose). Also you should ask for some beginners guide on !linux@lemmy.world or !linux@lemmy.ml
Isn't FOSS Stallman's definition? Free open source as opposed to just open source
Nah, I was reffering to Stallman's definition of 'open source'. He gets very mad when you reffer to FOSS as just 'open source' instead of 'free and open source', even tho almost everyone means FOSS when they say open source. And just for clarification: FOSS is defined by the FSF not by Stallman direct.
Gonna go with Firefox as both my most-used piece of open-source software, and the software I see as most important to its ecosystem. If Firefox fails then we've just got Chromium-based browsers and, I guess, Safari.
This a million times over!