Discover Hidden Gems: Open-Source Software You Should Know About
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GIMP - unlike Krita - which is made for drawing - this is made for photo-editing. It's like Photoshop. The learning curve is a bit steep, but it is really powerful.
Krita is certainly made for painting and also animation, but you can also edit photos with it, best to have both, GIMP and Krita, they are great complementing tools.
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It costs money to be an iOS developer
Serious companies pay their devs.
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I don't know what google keep is and I'm too lazy to look up proprietary software while browsing this community.
wrote last edited by [email protected]Google Keep is a very basic note-taking software. Imho its main appeal is that it seamlessly syncs between desktop browser and phone app - I use it for shopping lists.
Other note-taking apps are much more advanced in features. E.g. I use Obsidian (sadly not open source) for everything that doesn't need spreadsheets. Logseq, Joplin and SiYuan are open source alternatives recommended elsewhere in this thread.
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Changedetection.io: track selected websites for updates or price changes
I used to monitor a few things using it, but now they're all asking for captchas due to ai companies crawling everything
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fzf fuzzy finder. Great tool to quickly find those files you were looking for.
It's very integrated in some shells as well.
Use fzf-tab for tab completion, for instance.
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Learned about the mentos thing in 2006. Saw a list of things to flavor coke. This was #4 on the list and I decided to try it (yay mint coke) - at a dollar tree parking lot, in my car. Went off in my mouth and I maintained the pressure until I got the door open and my head out. Thankfully little mess on me or the car. Learned the internet can be full of sneaky assholes that day.
wrong thread?
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Inkscape - the best vector graphics program out there. So easy to use, and so powerful.
I'm not sure about that "best" qualifier. From what I've read, it still doesn't really support CMYK colour mode and its text tools are lacking compared to Adobe Illustrator.
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I used to monitor a few things using it, but now they're all asking for captchas due to ai companies crawling everything
that's sad
I'm only using it for tracking new releases of 400+ Steam developers, which still works
(mentioning the "400+" part bc I had tried so many other change tracking tools before finding this one, but the free ones all had limits of like 25 sites)
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For some reason, I just can't get my Kubuntu desktop and Android phone to talk to each other with this. It does weirdly connect just fine on Arch/EndeavourOS, though.
I also have problems with one machine, it just refuses to see the others. It might have something to do with the firewall or SElinux, but I'm not sure.
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I want to like this, but because there's no GTFS/public transport timetables, it makes it kinda impossible to use it to get around cities that publish their transport data.
PT is the one thing I'm still stuck on Google maps for. I REALLY want an open source alternative.
For public transit routing, I usually use the app of the local provider. But especially (not only) for Germany, Öffi is an open source alternative for them, that uses their APIs, I think.
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I'm not sure about that "best" qualifier. From what I've read, it still doesn't really support CMYK colour mode and its text tools are lacking compared to Adobe Illustrator.
CMYK is easy to work around.
So, your argument is, that you can find 1 tool where AI is better, and then everything else doesn't matter?
Well, fine - keep paying a sh*tload of money for Adobe, and use AI, that's totally fine by me.
Oh, if you'd be so kind, show me something made in AI, that Inkscape can't do?
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Krita is certainly made for painting and also animation, but you can also edit photos with it, best to have both, GIMP and Krita, they are great complementing tools.
Sure, you can use it to edit photos. That's just not it's strength.
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You should be able to achieve that with scrcpy (at least with Android). Never got around to test it myself, so I can't vouch for how well it works though. My usecase for it died with installing a mini-PC in my living room, and now it would only be a curiosity for me.
Works quite well. Scrcpy is some great "just works" piece of software. I use it for all kinds of stuff, from typing with my PCs screen and keyboard in android apps, to remotely connecting to phones hooked up in a lab (using adb over SSH port forwarding, plus reverse forwarding whatevet 27... port scrcpy uses)