Spyke
piefed.social

By a wide margin the many different projects for an open source phone OS. From GrapheneOS to PostmarketOS, from Ubuntu Mobile to Plasma Mobile.

I am sick and tired of corporations telling me how I can use my phone. I am sick and tired of corporations deciding what apps I can install, from where, and what data they are allowed to collect. I am done with enshittification and the gradual disappearing of all useful information, either behind a paywall, or replaced by monetized content.

The last straw was when Google Maps decided to replace the "gas station on the route" feature that sent you to the cheapest gas station to some other logic it didn't disclose, but that stinks of affiliate preference.

177
hansoloreply
lemmy.today

Absolutely, fully agree here. An Open Source widely applicable phone OS would benefit millions of people. Possibly billions.

45
ch00freply
lemmy.world

The frustrating part of this is how much of the smartphone world is dependent on companies playing along.

I have a Venmo business account I use from time to time. I tried to log in on it from my laptop yesterday to check my balance. I was met with this:

We used to complain that apps are just worse versions of websites, but increasingly, you're being forced to install an app just to do basic things.

Is there any way to guarantee every app will be available on a linux phone? We can grab APKs at the moment off sketchy websites, but I don't know how much longer that's going to work after Google kills sideloading.

28
hansoloreply
lemmy.today

Can you not just log in on a mobile browser in desktop only mode?

6
ch00freply
lemmy.world

No. This is literally from a desktop browser. That feature is only available on the app.

17
semreply
piefed.blahaj.zone

It really sucks, but at least there are alternatives to venmo. I've heard that in Europe, you're require to have an app to show your Id or use the bank or some such.

0

Nah. In Europe, Venmo is just not a thing, because bank transfers are free and fast. IDs are a plastic card, just like almost everywhere else.

Banking apps are a bit more problematic, because most people (and probably banks, idk) prefer if you use those not just if you have a smartphone and want to do banking on it, but also as a second factor for when you want to log in on your desktop.

There's plenty of alternatives (TAN readers, for example), but none as simple or seamless, unfortunately. But bank websites are fully featured (and usually more so than the app, actually).

7

You use an IBAN to send money. Yeah technically it's your bank, but it's a digital transfer without a middleman.

You can even put notes on it to pay invoices.

3

atm, if you're using Waydroid, you can use Aurora Store/ Droid. No shady websites needed!

2
TypFaffkereply
feddit.org

Can someone ELI5, why the phone landscape is so different from PCs? Why can I take a Linux iso and install it on basically any x86 pc from the last 25 years, but if I want to install anything on my phone, I need an image specially tailored for my specific model.

7

PCs have a BIOS/UEFI that provides hardware discovery and abstraction to the OS, while phones lack that and need the OS to know what hardware to expect.

20 years ago when the predecessors to modern smartphone hardware were being designed, there probably would have been meaningful costs to adding that kind of flexibility. There probably wouldn't today, but there's also no motivation for phone makers to do it.

13
lemmy.world

/e/OS is just another android rom, and unlike calyxOS or grapheneOS, /e/OS isn't very privacy focused. There's some weird stuff regarding a hidden "license id" and some of their services rely in openAI. You might as well just use a "real" privacy-first android rom if you're trying to get away from tech giants, their tracking and closed source software.

3

CalyxOS development is paused right now but it's still available and campatible with more devices. I wouldn't recommend a currently unsupported OS but personally I'm still using it on my Pixel 7a. I had some google integration issues in GrapheneOS, plus I prefer the focus on privacy instead of security.

2
sopuli.xyz

Best answer: Blender by far, Blender is ON FIRE right now, so many exciting things are happening.

The answer my heart gives: Beyond All Reason (my heart really loves watching robots and tanks blow each other up in scifi battles).

97
NeatNitreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Blender is a contender for the best go-to example in the history of open-source software. It's easy for any layperson to understand what it is (unlike, say, Linux), and it's genuinely better than the for-profit competition in a lot of aspects. There's nothing else like it.

It's been growing for decades, and its community is the best.

I'm really not in that space so I only get to watch from the sidelines, but I've always been in awe of Blender.

29
Valmondreply
lemmy.world

Fuuuck, gotta try to learn it again. I grew up on 3dsMax which was like the king of 3D in video game dev, and blender is/was just so different. Must be some simple tutos out there now how to make millimeter precise stuff & boolean operations on volumes for my 3D printing...

The good thing with open source is they can't just screw you over with new workflows or other (looking at you Unity, degrading float point resolution after 2.6).

4
NeatNitreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Must be some simple tutos out there now how to make millimeter precise stuff & boolean operations on volumes for my 3D printing…

Sounds like you need CAD software instead of 3D modeling software. Very different!

FreeCAD exists and is FOSS but IMO is not very user-friendly. Then again I never seriously tried using it or watching tutorials or anything, so this might be unfair. Give it a shot I suppose!

The few times I needed to design something in CAD, I had success with Fusion 360. It's easy to use and gets the job done, but it's kinda gross with its confusing (mandatory?) cloud integration.

You can ask in 3D printing circles what CAD software people use and recommend, they'll certainly know better than me! If you're up for giving FreeCAD a shot, I'll be happy to hear your experience with it. I'd really like to know if it's better than I give it credit for.

Edit: seems like a lot has changed since I last checked out FreeCAD. Version 1.0 was released and I'm sure it's better since I tried it. So forget what I said, it's probably good!

8
Valmondreply
lemmy.world

Thanks, but I have already tried out freecad and also that fusion 360 IIRC it was very nice on paper, making planes everywhere :-), but as you say very different from what I know! I just need to use basic shapes, say extract a spline, and combine/cut with boolean operators, and then fine tune the mesh and its vertices itself, well it is how I have always done it, not engineer worthy but it works for me...

3

I used 3dsmax a lot around 25ish years ago, and even though I pirated it, I remember it costing a fortune.

After getting back into 3D printing I needed something with which to do modelling, and as I'm exclusively on Linux I decided to dive into Blender.

My conclusion is that blender today is better than 3dsmax way back. I just need to translate allof my learned 3dsmax terms and techniques into blender.

15
highducreply
lemmy.ml

I just recently found out of Beyond all Reason and it looks so promising. I saw some guy on youtube commenting a few games.

I hope it catches on, not many big RTS games nowadays, and this one is open source too.

6

BAR and the spring/recoil engine have been in development for 20 years, it is a really impressive community and I have zero doubt BAR will grow massively in popularity, it doesn't just look cool in action, the moment to moment gameplay has been tweaked and refined for years and years while sticking with a coherent design vision. Not many other games can say that in the RTS genre or otherwise and you can feel the difference immediately after you get a handle on the combat tactics.

4
paper_moonreply
lemmy.world

Are there any mapping apps thats not google maps that has traffic data? I haven't looked in a while, but last time I did it was a 'no' and I'm just shocked this hasn't really been solved. Either by highjacking google maps data, or using local news data to fill in areas of maps with heavy traffic etc. There's gotta be some way to solve this.

Like I get it, projects can't just wholesale use google maps data, they'll get shut down, but there's no side loaded plugin you can load to use Google's traffic data and the project just kind of winks in their github page and says 'we don't encourage anyone to use this plugin...'?

4

Magic Earth. Sometimes it crashes and gives confusing voice instructions. But it has traffic data and is therefore my daily driver.

https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Magic_Earth

Not owned by Haliburton

https://ir.halliburton.com/news-releases/news-release-details/halliburton-announces-definitive-agreement-acquire-magic-earth

I am now wondering if these are two different things both named magic earth?

Yeah. My bad. Not owned by Halliburton. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Earth_Inc.

9

Meshtastic. I don't use it yet, but it is something interesting that I've kinda been low-key obsessed about.

Eventually, telecoms are gonna require IDs, internet service will require IDs. Computers will have DRMs and "AI" scanning your device to censor stuff.

Meshtashtic could be the backbone of a new "internet". One that's free from corporate control. We could build a forum on top of it.

68
mmmacreply
lemmy.zip

Lol, I'm pretty deep into meshtastic but there is no chance that LoRa could be the backbone of a new internet. Bandwidth is far too low

21

Who needs Bandwidth
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⣀⠤⣚⣻⣥⣴⣶⣶⣯⡕⢄⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠔⣡⣾⣿⡿⠟⠛⠛⠛⠻⠛⠻⣦⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⢸⣚⣿⣿⡏⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⣿⡆⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠈⣿⣿⣯⠞⣻⡆⠀⢀⣀⣀⣀⣀⣼⣿⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⢠⣿⡿⢣⡾⢻⣷⣾⣿⣿⣿⡟⠻⣿⣿⡆⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠈⣿⡇⢸⣼⠯⢿⣯⡙⢋⣡⣄⣀⣈⣿⡇⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⣿⡧⠤⠉⠉⠙⡦⢙⣿⣯⣿⣿⣿⣿⠃⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⢀⡿⢷⠀⠀⠀⠀⠁⣼⣿⣿⣿⣶⣶⡏⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⣀⣴⡏⠀⠸⡄⠀⠀⠀⠀⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣯⡅⠒⡄⢀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠾⠛⢋⣠⣡⡆⠀⣳⡀⠀⠀⢠⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣇⠀⠀⣆⣈⣗⣄⠀ ⠒⢿⡶⢾⣽⣧⣼⠁⠈⠉⢚⣿⣿⠏⠋⠘⢻⣿⣿⣿⣤⣤⣽⠘⣿⣿⡦
when you can just send ASCII Memes?

(Roll Safe, aka: "Guy Taps Forehead" Meme)

14

🤣 how many chars is this? Would it make it past the 200 character limit?

6

Reticulum would be much closer as it supports many different forms of networking

7
Matsreply
lemmy.world

And Lora is by itself proprietary isn't it?

4

Correct, I do believe there is an open source alternative but I haven't done any reading on it

3

Doubt that it would be Meshtastic, it is inherently not built for internet levels of bandwidth. But I can see a future where you have intranets that are free and community driven with something like Meshtastic with higher bandwidth and you still pay for an ISP that can give you access to the full internet (because nothing currently can replace underwater optic fiber)

2
slrpnk.net

It's been a hot minute since I've touched it, but godot is always going to have my favor. It works very well, doesn't have any bullshit.

I just need more motivation to finish my existing project, and keep the desire for a new one at bay.

52
NeatNitreply
discuss.tchncs.de

I've recently heard of Bevy, which is a new FOSS game engine made with Rust! I don't know a lot about it but my gamedev friend is excited about it. He doesn't care as much about it being FOSS (he's using Unreal for his current game) but it's supposed to just be good. Unreal is an absolute pain to work with.

That said, it's still in early stages. It's usable from what I understand, but even their quick start introduction warns about it and advises people to use Godot if they're looking for a mature, stable engine.

15
Valmondreply
lemmy.world

Godot is the beast. Using it on linux with C# and except having to deal with C# 🤓 it works fantasticly well!

6

I've been using it on linux as well, though I've been using godot script. I'm not the biggest fan of godot script, but again it gets the job done and has IMO very little bullshit.

5
sh.itjust.works

Ladybird because Mozilla is killing Firefox as fast as they can and I refuse to use Chrome or one of its forks.

39
m_‮freply
discuss.online

At a slightly lower level, I'm excited about Servo. Activity died off for a bit but it's gaining steam again. Still behind Ladybird progress-wise, but it will make a very strong foundation for a new web browser.

34

Servo is extra-important for things like webviews embedded in other apps.

12

I am a tad disappointed in Ladybird due to Andreas and Kirk debacle.

9

Exciting enough for me to use on a daily basis, and I'm actively following their development progress. Not contributing, mind you. Nobody wants me of all people touching their codebase.

FreeCAD - The open source alternative to various proprietary parametric CAD and solid modelling software such as Solidworks, Fusion360, OnShape, etc. This recently passed its milestone 1.0 release at which point it could finally be considered actually broadly functional for actual real world use. Among various other widgets, I prominently used it to make this and this. Yeah, you guys know how it is.

I consider FreeCAD pretty important coming from the 3D printing hobbyist's perspective because its the lone bulwark (well, okay, maybe also along with Blender and OpenSCAD) standing firm against the tidal wave of predatory bullshit being peddled by the commercial modelling software options, all of which at this point are genuine full-blown instruments of evil desperately trying to strangle, gatekeep, and paywall humankind's ability to just make some goddamned shapes to 3D print.

In other news, I complied UZDoom from source the other night because somehow I missed that zdoom.org has precompiled binaries on their site, which I haven't had to visit in years, but the UZDoom Github page doesn't. We live and learn. UZDoom is pretty exciting because it's a continuation of GZDoom with the added feature of kicking its insane former lead developer off of the project, or rather forking it out from under him. And everybody loves to play Doom.

24

Desktop environment for linux :3

The main big things that people talk about with it are the tiling features, and being written in rust, so those are the selling points for it I guess lol

13
Samsyreply
lemmy.ml

Tested cosmic and as a sway(fx) user, I was not excited

3

I'm glad you found something suitable for you.

3

It's taken Gnome and KDE years to refine, bug fix, improve features, etc. Cosmic is going to also take years to really develop too. For now it's just Gnome-like, but in rust. Not interested testing a DE when there are far more mature options out there. But I hope to see Cosmic develop into something nicer in the coming years.

1

Immich has been the biggest impact for me lately, but I wouldn't say it is the most exciting. I need to find one of those.

22

Linux of course, it's been headlining lately in terms of improvements particularly on the gaming front, but also FreeBSD based on how quickly it's been moving in terms of improvements on the general desktop front, FreeBSD is at the point where it's a viable third option on the desktop if you're not gaming, although that's assuming you're running its CURRENT branch since that's where the latest development happens.

20
lemmy.world

Plasma Bigscreen. I would love to replace my Apple TVs with something more open.

19

Funnily enough, I never managed to get big screen working on a raspberry pi. I ended up flashing a broken build of Android TV to it instead

2

Currently I think the one that is the most exciting to me is Natsumi Browser, a modification for most firefox-based browsers with an interface similar to arc or zen browser. I used zen for months after it released, but every few updates some core functionality would break and they kept removing features that were essential to my workflow so I much prefer this as a modification on top of Floorp. I think the dev just does it as a hobby project, but there's new useful features added frequently, and keybindings!

18

As someone who used zen for a while I feel that lol. I ended up going back to firefox, and I found ways to make it work for my workflow :3

4

Good point

I was mostly thinking in terms of Foss directly

Most gamers don't make their own games as far as I know

5

I think everything going on with the open source phone space is very exciting, also I think copyparty is very cool.

15
lemmy.world

A buddy and I were playing with Sonobus this morning. It lets you collaborate on music remotely.

Musicians will know already, but if you're not aware, the latency (lag) between participants makes it impractical to play in time together. But if you can get it below 30ms then it's roughly equivalent to playing with someone across the room. Needs a hard wired connection and the other people probably can't be more than 500 miles away. But for me eliminates a two hour round trip to work on a song.

12
scrionreply
lemmy.world

I'm currently compiling a list of open-source audio streaming solutions and I think Sonobus is not on there yet, so this is a pretty useful comment to me. Thanks.

6

You're welcome! I'd be interested to see your list if you share it somewhere.

3

I ended up using Sonobus to allow me to listen to my personal desktop computer output on my work computer. So my music streaming and video streaming isn't on the work machine.

1

PeerTube. It's a video sharing platform with ActivityPub federation and with peer to peer video sharing like a torrent (it is one I think) which lightens the load on instances. An alternative to YouTube is NEEDED right now. A good way to make it grow is to simply start a channel and post videos. It's currently very underpopulated. Some YouTube channels such as The Linux Experiment mirror their channels to PeerTube, so if you have a YT channel, mirror it to PeerTube.

Also to me it seems like Matrix could be the messenger of the future, replacing WhatsApp, SMS/calls, and social media DMs.

The general mobile Linux space is also interesting right now. Year of the Linux phone when? It's not currently fully ready but it's advancing. Also the FSF announced the LibrePhone initiative so there'll probably be more advancement.

12
lemmy.world

Haiku. We need a more modern OS to compete against Linux.

11
ripcordreply
lemmy.world

I've been really floored by how much KDE stuff they've been able to get running on it.

I wish a couple of the UI things could be changed though, like how windows are maximized and things, though. I'm totally on board with the Be influence. However, some of it feels actually stuck in the 90s instead of evolving into whatever Be would have become.

But overall it's still really impressive and I throw them a $20 here and there when I can to help support it.

2

I like I2P. Such a cool concept and there are plenty of services that can be built upon it. Most famous for anonymous torrenting I suppose, but it can do so much more.

10

PostmarketOS, I have an fp3 I want to install it on

I'm also watching the latest 1v1 tournament of Beyond All Reason, double heavy mines are terrifying

8

I am super hyped about Arrs. I have configured a stack and yet to activate it. Waiting til I can install Raspberry pi with vpn in another country for an endless downloads.

All the Arr stuff is working really great already. Whats going to happen in future? Can't wait!

Other than that, Immich is dope.

7
feddit.org

Nushell - I love that it exists, and I find it a joy to use over other shells - stable and rich enough as a productive driver, and being actively developed towards a stable 1.0

C# - three more days until the next release, which adds only a few useful-to-me extensions, but the existing base, stability, and usefulness are part of its charm

7
hoppolitoreply
mander.xyz

Do you have any beginner-to-intermediate learning resources for nushell?

I have it set up on my system and try dabbling with it every once in a while but it’s so different to my ash muscle memories that I bounce off a little.

I read through much of the docs and the cookbook but every time I actually try to use it for something productive I get tangled in minutiae of some issue or another, mostly around the data piping I think.

Did you have to break through a similar ‘barrier’ or did it instantly click for you when approaching nushell originally?

1
Kissakireply
feddit.org

Yeah, I experienced a similar barrier.

I got interested and hooked on the description, but hadn't used it productively or made the switch. Trying to use it felt quite irritating. After a few instances like that (maybe three to five), I had something I wanted to do and committed to finding the appropriate commands and syntax. After one or two such cases, I felt more comfortable, and progression was much easier through needing and finding additional individual commands, etc.

Because it's so different, there's definitely a barrier, which I think is mainly the set of commands you have to know and, at times, data transformation flow (records vs tables vs lists, and the appropriate mental model to use the correct operations on them).

I didn't use special resources or a full guide or introduction that was not the official docs.
Mainly official Nushell docs, command help/docs, web search, and at times LLMs.

2
hoppolitoreply
mander.xyz

That makes sense and I do think nushell has a legitimate place between simple zsh/bash scripts and more complex python ones for me. I think mostly I had issues rubbing against the functional nature of dealing with variables, but hearing your similar experience of grokking the mental model motivates me to try exploring a bit more again :-)

Also, I am surprised by how much it changed since I last tried it around version 0.87 or so! Perhaps I'll wait for the API to settle down a bit and then strike out again.

Thanks!

2

I'm used to implementing C# LINQ (method syntax) queries, which I like a lot (for simple queries) as a functional style linear data transformation process.

It's a bit different than classic procedural scripts, but most things and scripts operate on data either way, where it's no worse and can be better in terms of scoping.

When the simple, direct implementation does not succeed, I tend to do it step by step. Query into a variable, then I can print out the variable, verify my assumptions, and then start from the variable, continuing with the next set of transformations. Using stored json files instead of just variables can also be helpful.

It could certainly change some more, given that it's not a 1.0 stabilized API. Still, I find it comparatively stable. Specifically, the core stuff.


I've used Nushell at work to work with a mass of BSON files for managing "IoT" devices. After implementing a Rust plugin for BSON, Nushell was very useful, and everything else would have been much more of a hassle.


There's also [email protected], btw.

1
piefed.social

I really love the work Asahi linux is doing, once they add m3 support (god knows when) I am switching over.

6

My M2 MBP is basically a desktop workstation, so Asahi not supporting DisplayPort over USB-C means that I won't be able to connect a monitor, which I do 98% of the time. I'm switching when the driver releases.

1

I have a few open source audio projects in the works myself right now. Aside from my own stuff, Fish shell has been my latest addiction.

5

Harvester. K8s cluster in box and vms and now open switch packaged with it.

Still trying to find a best way to grab graphics outputs so I can create a display as a service to any of the clusters connected monitors

1

Bitcoin as it is so disruptive and a blueprint for how to truly run a decentralized service that cannot be controlled.

-10

You should look into XMR.

it's actually untraceable, unlike bitcoin, and I'd wager a major reason why 'the powers that b' want us to avoid cryptocurrency altogether.

0