A very nice resource!
I found it while reading up on presentation software (pdfpc and such).
Feels like I keep hearing about new FOSS tools and services interfacing with Mastodon every day.
I need some place to keep track of them.
Det här var ju goda nyheter!
34 svenska myndigheter (inom ramen för eSam och dess projekt digital samarbetsplattform, dSam) har tagit tydlig ställning för e-tjänster med hög säkerhet, garanterad suveränitet, öppen källkod och öppna standarder.
Veusz is a scientific plotting and graphing program with a graphical user interface, designed to produce publication-ready 2D and 3D plots. In addition it can be used as a module in Python for plotting. Veusz is multiplatform, running on Windows, Linux/Unix and macOS.
It supports vector and bitmap output, including PDF, Postscript, SVG and EMF.
When considering automation apps for Android, Tasker immediately comes to mind. And although it has name recognition, it's source code is proprietary and the app requires the Google Play store on the device (beyond a 7-day trial version).
Ethical, easy-to-use and privacy-conscious alternatives to well-known software
The source code for the website is published on codeberg (meaning you can suggest changes, etc.).
Free and open source software for video recording and live streaming. Windows, Mac or Linux.
I heard about it just recently, and in short order stumbled on a number of interesting ideas:
Podcast (Hanselminutes) with OBS project lead Hugh Bailey (July 2020)
Free and open source PDF readers. A list by the FSFE.
Fantastic little tool. I used it on Baahubali 2, whose subtitles were drifting more and more with time, and it corrected it without any user intervention. Very nice!
It is even integrated into Bazarr (automatic subtitle synchronisation can be enabled in Bazarr's settings).
This could perhaps be a much more stable alternative to my reverse SSH tunnels for keeping connections with various servers, especially desktops inside FM-NET and other machines inside other LANs.
The main downside is that Tailscale is not FOSS. So perhaps we should look for other solutions built on WireGuard, or perhaps learn to configure WireGuard directly.
OPSIN is the (open source) standard for parsing IUPAC names.
OPSIN source code is on Github
Fraidycat is a desktop app or browser extension for Firefox or Chrome. You can use it to follow people (hundreds) on whatever platform they choose - Twitter, a blog, YouTube, Instagram or even on a public TiddlyWiki.
So it's like a feed reader, and if you use your browser sync functionality, it will sync between your devices. Really worth trying out this concept, especially if you don't want to setup your own web-based feed reader. The built-in (and increasing) support for many non-RSS sources is also nice.
Code: https://github.com/kickscondor/fraidycat
A good Firefox add-on is Privacy Redirect. Apart from handling Youtube can also redirect other services, and it also automatically rotates each redirect from a list of Invidious instances so as to avoid overloading any single one.
See Invidious Instances for a list of publicly available instances.
Another approach is to replace Youtube with an open-source, federated video host service.
That would be PeerTube (see this blog post by LazyBear).