opensource

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hashferret, in I'm amazed at FreeCAD's abilities. It needs a better name. Thinking of it as simply "cad software" like calling a 2-GHz computer in your pocket a "phone".

Seems like a good opportunity to ask if anyone can recommend learning materials for FreeCAD? Used Solidworks and AutoCAD in school but fell back on tinkercad for a recent project just cause I didn’t have time to invest in learning.

cmnybo,

This is a pretty good tutorial to get started in FreeCAD. Just watch out for the topological naming issue. They still haven’t fixed it, but if you know how to avoid it, you shouldn’t have too much trouble.

PlutoniumAcid,
@PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world avatar

Parametric is such a leap, when coming from toy blocks like TinkerCad in which I can really easily do all that I want except those sexy fillets…

I really want to learn it but it feels so convoluted and difficult. I’m aware that FreeCAD is not the easiest, and some commercial packages are easier to grok but their licensing is really hostile to simple hobbyists so I am trying to to take the high road, for now anyway.

Sensitivezombie, in Alright boys, I've been converted to the light side and have installed F-Droid. Now what?

Begin to de-google yourself. Research on FOSS alternatives to Google apps and services. Depending on your reliance, this may be a slow process. It’s OK. Build an understanding that there will be lots of sacrificing, especially convenience around the brand ecosystem that Google and Apple are known for.

Tangent5280,

It’s a bit unnerving, to understand how massive an influence that one company has on our lives.

BlanK0, in OSS-Blacklist: A blacklist for keeping track of OSS hostile companies/organizations

I really like seeing codeberg being used more.

Also I’m definitely keeping my eyes on this repo once in a while 👀🧐🍵

hperrin, in What comes after open source? Bruce Perens is working on it

I don’t particularly agree with his impression that the average user doesn’t benefit from open source, or that they should know anything about open source.

The only popular operating system that isn’t based on an open source kernel is Windows. Nearly every mobile phone in the entire world is running an open source kernel. And I’d bet that nearly every computer system in the world has at least some open source software running on it.

And who cares whether the average user knows about open source software? The average Blender user doesn’t use it because it’s open source, they use it because it’s the best 3D modeling software. The benefits of open source software are usually what makes it enticing to people who have no idea what open source is.

alansuspect, in It's joever. Tachiyomi will no longer be actively developed.

I haven’t heard of this before, but why is a reader a threat to a company? What’s the issue?

War,

It’s not but to a company it’s a gateway to threats (extensions) so as far as they’re concerned it’s a threat.

Inui,

The reader includes extensions that allow you to download manga from various unofficial sources. So their justification is that it facilitates piracy. It’s still the best manga reader (imo), but there’s dozens of other options for local media without that feature. There’s no world in which I buy physical manga or subscribe to 12 different services to get access to the ones I want to read, so I don’t know how much the company is ‘winning’ with this move.

GardenVarietyAnxiety, in Release Stargate DAW 24.01.1

Indeed.

barberousse,
@barberousse@lemmy.ca avatar

Oh, for crying out loud !

jelloeater85, (edited )
@jelloeater85@lemmy.world avatar

Phat beats KREE!

tate, (edited ) in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux
@tate@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Because of a different Lemmy post, I’m just now trying out Orgzly. It looks terrific so far, and I think it meets all your needs. It stores everything in plain text, so you just have to sync the text files.

edit: as noptys points out, Orgzly Revived is what you want to use (and what I meant to recommend).

danie10,
@danie10@lemmy.ml avatar

Interesting, I see Orgzly uses Org mode formatting in plain text - orgmode.org/features.html

noptys,

If you enjoy Orgzly, the updated fork is likely what you want - https://f-droid.org/packages/com.orgzlyrevived/ It has bug fixes, additional features, and is under active development.

library_napper, in Alright boys, I've been converted to the light side and have installed F-Droid. Now what?
@library_napper@monyet.cc avatar

Remove gapps

Tangent5280,

Yeah, that’s the endgame. I hope to replace everything I use eventually.

kratoz29, (edited )
@kratoz29@lemm.ee avatar

There are no in between library_napper probably.

ogeist, in Don't be that guy.

There is always a risk using libraries from others. If you install something without knowing what you are doing and without considering the risks, you should not be installing it.

corvus, (edited )
@corvus@lemmy.ml avatar

You are literally sending 99% of the new Linux users back to Windows haha. C’ mon its not that hard, look at what custom ROM developers do. They put a big disclaimer warning of the risks of installing the software. You won’t find a single user blaming the devs for a bricked phone, and there are lot of them. The one who has to consider the risks and warn about them is the dev, just because (s)he is the one who knows the software better and not all users are developers and they usually don’t know what are the risks.

ogeist,

You can install shit in Windows too, it is exactly the same case when grandma installs too many toolbars in Internet Explorer 6. No one is warning you there that you might be installing malware.

What I mean is that there are already curated repositories for each distro that can be accessed easily by the package manager. If you go outside of your package manager and repos, gloves are off, you better know what you are doing.

Regarding custom ROMs, since you brought it up and being a custom ROM enthusiast, there are still a lot of complaints, nastiness and pressure from the users similar to this. Installing a ROM has definitely a higher knowledge barrier and that makes you aware of the risks, also you will brick your phone before you are able to install a ROM… if you don’t know what you are doing.

Finally, the developer here in this very lemmy post mentions that the OP of that bug report was working with them in order to solve the issue. The one on the screenshot was just a random dude unnecessarily being rude. Free software is usually delivered as is with no warranties, specifically small projects and libraries.

Thanks for coming to my TED.talk

GrappleHat, in Could we add alternativeto.net to the sidebar?
@GrappleHat@lemmy.ml avatar

Very good suggestion. Alternativeto.net is a great resource that I return to often. Eased the transition greatly when I originally left the “mainstream apps”.

Auzy, in Thoughts on Post-Open Source?

Doesn’t make sense at all.

I keep seeing Redhat used an example, but they contribute a HUGE amount a source code and projects… Pipewire, systemd, rpm, DBUS and even the main XML addon for VSCode, etc.

I don’t think people realise how much poop linux would be swimming in if they went bankrupt…

Redhat are literally one of the big reasons why Linux is so seamless these days, and they’re solving a lot of the big problems. And from my understanding, they still contribute the code seperately anyway.

That being said, I agree money needs to go towards developers. However, a lot of them end up hired at major companies. And I don’t think this is the way to approach it

captain_aggravated, in I'm amazed at FreeCAD's abilities. It needs a better name. Thinking of it as simply "cad software" like calling a 2-GHz computer in your pocket a "phone".
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yeah if you want to be reductive about it, FreeCAD is a GUI wrapper for OpenCASCADE, its CAD engine. FreeCAD is designed to be extensible; the workbench system allows for several different workflows, and using the Python API it’s not that far out there to make your own workbench for specialized tasks. You could build a clockwork workbench if you were interested in designing escapements and such.

The tradeoff is it can seem overhwelming because there’s a LOT of functionality in there. I do almost all of my work in the Spreadsheet, Sketcher and Part Design workbench, plus the A2Plus assembly workbench from the addon manager.

kelvie,

Spreadsheet

Curious to hear what it’s like making parts with a spreadsheet. Is it like coding?

I use openscad a lot, and just tried using spreadsheets – adding parameters to each property in a part still seems really clunky, compared to editing a scad file in Emacs, which I vastly prefer, especially now that there’s AI code autocomplete.

JackDavies,

I use the spreadsheet to hold dimensions/variable and formulas, makes it easier to modify designs. If I want to change a length, hole size height etc just change the spreadsheet values don’t have to mess around with the sketches or 3d part designs directly.

One slightly frustrating thing i found is sometimes it fails to recompute the design or processes it incorrectly when values are changed by large amounts, that’s probably more to do with how I design things though

ook_the_librarian,
@ook_the_librarian@lemmy.world avatar

I just thought in hindsight, my response to you plugging freecad is funny.

It’s like you took me into your workshop with all these benches, and I just point at the openscad bench like a caveman and grunt “scad”.

poVoq, in open source pdf editor for linux based os?
@poVoq@slrpnk.net avatar

For small edits I usually use xournalpp.github.io

I think OnlyOffice also recently added PDF editing.

d3Xt3r, (edited ) in An App by Google to test RCS protocol

There’s not really much of a point using the RCS Test app, as it’s only a demo of very basic RCS features.

The thing with RCS is that whilst the “official” spec (ie the Universal Profile), as defined by the GSM Alliance, is open, it doesn’t implement or define many modern of the chat features found in modern apps, such as reactions, replies, end-to-end encryption etc. These features however, have been implemented by Google in their Messages app and their Jibe backed service. The problem is that these additions by Google are proprietary and only works via Google’s Messages app, so third-party messaging apps can’t get in on the fun.

I believe Samsung’s Messages app may also have access to some(?) of these features if the cellular carrier also uses Google’s Jibe servers for RCS routing, but don’t quote me on that.

As for Apple, I’m pretty sure that if they implement RCS (supposedly this year), it’ll either be the Universal Profile, or most likely the Universal Profile + some proprietary Apple magic sauce for added features. Not sure about E2E encryption though - they would have to work with Google for that to work (for interoperability with Messages), so we’ll have to see how that goes. If I were to guess, I’d say E2E on Apple would most likely be limited to Apple devices. But at least we can expect basic rich messaging features to work cross-platform, so that’s something I guess.

In any case, the main issue remains that Google hasn’t opened up the API/spec for their version of RCS - and the GSMA is seemingly doing nothing about it either, the Universal Profile hasn’t had any updates in the last four years. You can read about the spec in detail here, and if you do, you’ll see that there’s no mention of modern chat features such as end-to-end encryption…

So on one hand, it’s a good thing that Apple is getting RCS this year, but it’ll likely remain either the at the basic Universal Profile level, or some proprietary Apple stuff thrown in, both of which aren’t really ideal.

For the rest of us, none of this really matters unless Google opens up the spec, because why the heck would you settle for a somewhat insecure and limited protocol, when there are far better messaging apps out there, with a greater userbase and cross-platform interoperability?

2xsaiko,
@2xsaiko@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

So on one hand, it’s a good thing that Apple is getting RCS this year, but it’ll likely remain either the at the basic Universal Profile level, or some proprietary Apple stuff thrown in, both of which aren’t really ideal.

No, I would say the first is the best option. It would create incentive for actually improving the Universal Profile. The “bad ending” would be Apple adopting Google’s proprietary extensions.

scooby007, in Webmail server with multiple mail accounts

K-9 mail app on android has a unified inbox. This is a FOSS app and part of thunderbird now.

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