We all love open-source software, but there are so many amazing projects out there that often go unnoticed. Let’s change that! Share your favorite open-source software that you think more people should know about. Here’s how you can contribute:
- Single Option Per Comment: Mention one open-source software per comment to be able to easily find the most popular software.
- No Duplicates: Avoid duplicating software that has already been mentioned to ensure a wide variety of options.
- Upvote What You Love: If you see a software that you also appreciate, upvote it to help others discover it more easily.
Check out last year’s post for more inspiration: Last Year’s Post
Let’s create a comprehensive list of open-source software that everyone should know about!
Having discarded many other options, I’m looking at Cloud Stack for hosting VMs at home and the job site.
This will be like your proxmox, your libvirt, your openstack (which derived from it), your oVirt(RHEV,OLVM,etc).
If you are in the market for a new alternative, please consider this less known option.
Newpipe, an YouTube client, which is:
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ad free
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lightweight
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useful, it allows downloading videos, music, and playing them when screen is locked
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usable without account
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multi-platform, it can also serve as client for the PeerTube, Bandcamp, SoundCloud
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MusicBrainz Picard: superb mp3 tagger with online metadata lookup feature and audio track fingerprinting
The gods of learning and studying with flashcards. You will never want another flashcard program, especially if you were still using Quizlet (so enshittified now…) because Anki uses SRS (spaced repetition system) which makes you review things right before your brain forgets it to reinforce the subject material.
Add-ons: Bread and butter of Anki, I use several to make beautiful automatic flashcards of reading material/videos/games when I study Japanese. There’s an add-on for literally anything.
Cross platform: Free on desktop, cost $25 on iOS, and free on Android, although Ankidroid is an unofficial app. Still great though!
Cloud: Syncs your anki database across devices. If you don’t use anki for a while, will delete from the cloud, but as long as you have your own local database intact, you can reupload again later.
Sharing Decks: If you don’t feel like making your own decks, download ones that others shared for free.
Anki is used by language learners, college students, med students, etc. If you need to memorize it, use Anki.
FanControl: superb PC fan manager with custom temperature/fan speed curves and the options to combine sensors whatever way you like
Restic, a reliable backup solution.
librewolf a privacy-focused fork of the latest stable firefox (win,linux,mac)
Open Hardware Monitor: track and visualise CPU/GPU/HDD/etc. performance over time
(I’ve been using the original repo that I see hasn’t been updated in some years, this is a more active fork.)
Open Video Downloader: Download any video or playlist from Youtube as audio and/or video, in various resolutions.
Kodi multimedia center.
Calibre: great e-book manager
Photoshop (almost) right in your browser, desktop or mobile, also as PWA or even selfhosted
I recently found out after creating Linux, Linus Torvalds wanted to make a good open source scuba dive log software. Today, it’s probably one of the best, if not the best dive log programs out there and I recently used this myself on a recent dive and it’s great.
Trillium Next: The last note taking software you will ever need. It works as a standalone, or in a client/server configuration across almost all platforms.
NotallyX. Basically free, open source Google Keep, for anyone that enjoys that app.