Vej, (edited )

Libre office, a great office option. I’ve been using it for 15 years. Foreshadowing

VLC, Plays media. It’s a tank. Also Highways use VLC to mark many winter potholes.

Linux, It’s not that hard to use anymore.( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

WINE, not just for one night stands! it’s great for running Windows Stuff on Linux.

Also, and my personal favorite, your mom is free and open source. Mic Drop going to bed. With your mom. Wasn’t expecting that twice were you? Well, neither was your mom. Got 'em.

otter,

Also Highways use VLC to mark many winter potholes

I was searching for some kind of VLC based image / video processing algorithm to detect potholes

Was this a joke about how the logo is a traffic cone

Vej,

Yes. Very much so.

wsweg,

VLC: Very Large Cone

puppy,

mpv has superior playback quality to VLC in my opinion.

TheAnonymouseJoker,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

MPV cannot fulfill the playlist needs. So I regularly use MPV to play standalone videos, since it is superior, but I use VLC to play video playlists and to be able to rotate/flip and play a weird video.

SMPlayer frontend for MPV is just not the same as VLC.

VLC is the Swiss Army knife of media playback, while MPV is the superior standalone video player. Use both.

Turun,

I use celluloid, because I absolutely hate the mpv interface. Seriously, how unexplorable and unintuitive can you make it?

WillyWonksters,

I used to feel the same way, but the interface is actually super customizable if you are ok with editing config files!

Here is the manual.

There is also a huge variety of third party scripts, like this one shows thumbnail previews when hovering over the seek bar.

jack,

It’s driven by keyboard shortcuts

Turun,

Yes, that is deeply connected with being unexplorable.

Celluloid is also keyboard driven. But in celluloid there are clearly marked buttons for the most used functions and I can open the menu to check the keyboard shortcuts. Not so in mpv.

For what it’s worth, I think celluloid is a thin wrapper around mpv with the only purpose to provide a better UI. And I’m very thankful for and happy with that.

jack,

I really like the idea of Celluloid. However, last time I tried, it somehow felt less performant than pure mpv. Colors a bit washed out and not perfectly smooth playback. Should try it again soon.

Turun,

Yeah, it does have some hickups when playing a movie from my HDD. I think it doesn’t prefetch enough data, because I didn’t have any issues after copying the movie to a tmpfs.

I still use it over mpv, because I truly cannot stand mpvs UX. But a valid point.

dave,
@dave@feddit.uk avatar

I’ve also find mpv about a thousand times faster to start up.

puppy,

And to seek to position!

9point6,

Aren’t they both based on ffmpeg? Surely any quality difference is just a configuration issue?

puppy,

Yes. If I remember correctly VLC was originally configured (maybe still is) to network streams and prioritize no lag. That’s why you get weird artifacts in VLC sometimes that’s not present in mpv.

Carighan,
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

I will say that on Windows at least I prefer MPC-HC because of how much smaller and snappier it is compared to VLC.

TheAnonymouseJoker,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

MPC-HC has an amazing function of video thumbnail on position seekbar, like YouTube and most online video sites. I really would want something like that for Linux.

Tibert, (edited )

MPC-HC instead of VLC github.com/clsid2/mpc-hc (the still maintained one) (windows only)

For me VLC had issues to stream very high bitrate content on my pc. MPC-HC used less resources while being smooth too.

nudnyekscentryk,
@nudnyekscentryk@szmer.info avatar

Libre office, a great office option. I’ve been using it for 15 years. Foreshadowing

I love LO as well, it’s perfect if you’re used to old versions of MS Office and like to be in control of everything. A good open-source alternative for the new releases of MS Office is Onlyoffice.

Voyager, (edited )

OpenStreetMap (OSM) is an open-source (open data) project. OpenStreetMap is a collaborative mapping platform that allows users from around the world to contribute, edit, and use geographical data. The data and software behind OSM are open-source, which means they are freely available for anyone to view, use, modify, and distribute under open licenses.

The data contributed to OpenStreetMap islicensed under the Open Database License (ODbL). This license allows for the free use of the data as long as proper attribution is given and any derivative works are also made available under the same open license.

I got addicted to using and contributing on OSM daily and enjoy spending my time improving the map. In fact a lot of closed source maps such as Google Maps and Apple Maps pull from some of the OSM data, so everyone gets to benefit from contributions.

In case you’re looking into this out of curiosity, check out the Beginner’s Guide and try to verify that the data around your neighborhood is correct and maybe add a point of interest (PoI) or a street name or two. Beware, it gets addictive quite fast.

OSM is also used for humanitarian use thanks to the HOT tasking platform. For example the majority of relief effort in Turkey’s February earthquake, Sri Lanka flooding, and the recent Marocco earthquake. Mapping can literally help save lives. It’s fun and easy too!

7bicycles,

Also OSM usually beats Apple and Google by a mile when it comes to route planning for bicycles. I think it’s one part techbros being eternally car brained and one part if you’re a cyclist the chance you’re the kind of crank to contribute to things like OSM is exponentially increased.

Estebiu,
@Estebiu@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

For hiking too osm is a godsend

KrokanteBamischijf,

Additionally, if you’re into mapping, give QGIS a try.

It’s an open source geospatial data management application, which is available cross-platform.

It neatly integrates many processing tools into a relatively intuitive GUI, and having even some basic skill can lead to some job opportunities.

You can even import OSM data through plugins or download services, which you can use for all kinds of fancy things.

Crabhands,
@Crabhands@lemmy.ml avatar

I’ve been using this as my main map app for years. Ive never contributed though, and will do that next!

Voyager,

You can start light, just by verifying that the data is up to date or adding some information eg. wheelchairs facilities or payment methods accepted. I use a tool called Every Door (Android) and it makes this surveying really simple and quick.

Crabhands,
@Crabhands@lemmy.ml avatar

Nice! Every door was on fdroid (Foss) so its now installed!

sixty,

I once saw a comment about an app that made it easier to contribute to OSM. Do you know which one that might be?

pietervdvn,
@pietervdvn@lemmy.ml avatar

You can also try the webapp mapcomplete.org

Voyager,

Honorable mention for Maproulette as well!

profilelost,

That was very likely Street Complete which is self explanatory and a great way to start. You are adding all kinds of useful information about any kind of object or building with this.

There’s also Vespucci which allows to alter the whole map (ie edit streets, POIs and so on) but takes a lot more to get familiar with.

GreatAlbatross,
@GreatAlbatross@feddit.uk avatar

I love OSM, I try to put notes to fix things when I see them (for example, one-way streets that aren’t properly set up, or left turns that aren’t allowed). One day I’ll hopefully have the confidence to fix things myself.

I use Osmand mostly, as it allows me to easily have everything offline. (Plus I can sideload/back up the maps on android)

ClemaX,

There is a fun app called StreetComplete than makes it easy to complete missing info and I suppose fix it too.

raptir,

Is there a decent option for using OSM with Android Auto? I want to move away from Google as much as possible, but Mapfactor’s routing is… well, terrible.

Voyager, (edited )

Give OsmAnd a try. Organic Maps are also working on the integration, but its not yet there and fully refined, though it is my preferred map for navigation while driving.

raptir,

Hmmm, I’m using osmand from Fdroid and it does not support it. It looks like you need to use the subscription version which is a bit much but I’ll take a look.

boboblaw,

Not necessarily subscription, it looks like the $30 osmand+ app supports it. Also, you can just steal it. :D

Salix,

Magic Earth uses OSM and has Android Auto capability. It also has traffic data. It’s not open source, but they have a great privacy policy.

pietervdvn,
@pietervdvn@lemmy.ml avatar

There is a (somewhat) active community here too: !openstreetmap

state_electrician,

I love OSM and use it through OsmAnd. I also contributed in the past, creating the first mapping for the area I lived in back then. I want to contribute again. But I find that wherever I go, everything is already mapped to the finest detail. A good problem to have, I think.

Fisch,
@Fisch@lemmy.ml avatar

And if you want a maps app that uses OSM, I recommend Organic Maps

wrath-sedan,
wrath-sedan avatar

For anyone doing academic writing, I use a combination of Logseq, Zotero, and Zettlr. All open source. Collect articles in Zotero. Annotate and take notes on those articles in Logseq with absolutely amazing PDF annotation tools. Write draft in Zettlr which allows me to enter Zotero citations and reference Logseq notes.

Bonus shoutout to LibreOffice for exporting and formatting the final draft. And that’s your recipe for one all-natural, organic, FOSS thesis!

funky_rodent,
@funky_rodent@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I guess, i love you The PDF annotation part always bothered me. Will give it a try

wrath-sedan,
wrath-sedan avatar

I… love you too?

alsimoneau,

How does it compare to LaTeX?

NightAuthor,

LibreOffice?

It’s basically Microsoft office, I don’t know if anything even remotely like LaTeX.

wrath-sedan,
wrath-sedan avatar

Unfortunately I’ve never used LaTeX so someone else will have to answer that.

charles,

Zotero is such a lifesaver. I started using it to allow for easier citations and reference lists but I’ve loved being able to keep my sources organized and saved in one place while doing research. The browser extensions are also super convenient to save everything to sort later on.

j4k3,
@j4k3@lemmy.world avatar

Oobabooga Textgen Webui - because offline open source AI is the biggest force multiplier and most powerful game changer in the last 20 years. It will reshape everything in the next couple of years. This will be bigger than the revolution of capacitive touch screens. Oobabooga is easy, and it makes playing with AI easy even if you don’t have the best hardware. Get it on github, then go to Hugging Face for models. Look for prequantized models by The Bloke, read the model card. His models tell you the minimum requirements and what you need to do.

Lolors17,

GNU/Linux and the PineTime

j4k3,
@j4k3@lemmy.world avatar

Why PT?

Lolors17,

Its very cool and I love the minimalism. I love, that I have so many choices. I can choose what OS I want, I can choose which Watchface I wanna flash and so on.

captain_aggravated, (edited )
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

Really going to plug KeePassXC. I think there are several forks for different platforms/slightly different implementations of the KeePass family of password managers, but I prefer the “app that creates a file” paradigm of KeePass to Bitwarden’s “server that hosts a database” paradigm.

RedNotebook. It’s not 100% what I was looking for in journal software, but it’s the closest I tried. For the longest time I kept a journal in plaintext using basically any text editor that fell to hand, but RedNotebook lets me use some formatting and rich text (apparently via YAML or similar markup notation?) and adding pictures/links etc. I do sometimes use my journal to kind of stream-of-conscious-brainstorm, and checklist functionality would be handy for that but any app I’ve found that provides that is also incomprehensible. I also like that RedNotebook respects my system theme.

AutoKey. You’re aware of AutoHotKey for Windows? Well AutoKey runs on Linux, and it uses Python for its scripting language instead of its own proprietary weirdness. I use it all the time.

Gonna mention FreeCAD. FreeCAD probably has the worst case of FOSS disease I’m aware of; it’s UI is a klunky mess, it’s perpetually unfinished, but if you can survive the utter pain in the ass it is to live with it’s extremely powerful. Just the fact that it’s a CAD program with a built-in spreadsheet is a total game changer. There’s a lot to dislike here, but I honestly don’t know what I’d do without it.

Firefox. Everyone reading this already knows everything I’m going to say.

Thonny. A pretty basic Python editor/IDE aimed at beginners and students, but I’m quite fond of it, especially when playing with Micropython on various little microcontrollers.

Kaypher,

For RedJournal you mean Red Notebook? rednotebook.app

captain_aggravated,
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yes I do. Fixing…

Peddlephile,

OpenRA

riley0,
@riley0@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Qbittorrent and LibreOffice

landsharkkidd,
@landsharkkidd@aussie.zone avatar

Yeah I’ve been a uTorrent person for years, but I think two years ago or so I just went “fuck it!” Because the constant ads (and also horny af ads) were doing my head in. So highly recommend Qbittorrent.

Recant,

Bitwarden for sure! It is certainly the easiest way to increase security on all your accounts by making extremely secure passwords. Plus you can self host it if you want!

Antitrust7668,

What’s that mean, “self host”?

codenul,

Top two for me are Freetube and KDE Connect.

Sharing files (and all the other features) with KDE Connect across 2 devices on same network has never been so easier.

furrowsofar,

Python!

JokeDeity,

I am STRUGGLING to remember what I’m learning big time. 😭

deanne,
@deanne@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

LineageOS

pewgar_seemsimandroid,

squaker for twitter since it helps me get info on calyx xmpp/jabber server

electric_nan,

Yunohost! If you want to get started self-hosting some services, check out Yunohost. It’s super easy to setup and run, active development and community, and just awesome. I found it so much easier than docker-based projects. I used to have it running on an old eeepc netbook, but now I have a dedicated tower server for it.

chemicalwonka,
@chemicalwonka@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

GrapheneOS

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • asklemmy@lemmy.ml
  • rosin
  • ngwrru68w68
  • thenastyranch
  • magazineikmin
  • hgfsjryuu7
  • DreamBathrooms
  • Youngstown
  • slotface
  • vwfavf
  • PowerRangers
  • everett
  • kavyap
  • Durango
  • khanakhh
  • Leos
  • tacticalgear
  • InstantRegret
  • cubers
  • mdbf
  • ethstaker
  • osvaldo12
  • GTA5RPClips
  • cisconetworking
  • tester
  • normalnudes
  • modclub
  • anitta
  • provamag3
  • All magazines