Hello, I would like to hear your open source alternatives for programs that we use everyday.

For me:

  • Youtube music on phone -> metrolist
  • Google maps -> organic maps Now it’s coMaps
  • Windows -> linux
  • Android -> grapheneos
  • Reddit -> lemmy (racoon client on phone)
  • Youtube on phone -> newpipe
  • Youtube on pc -> youtube-tui with mpv
  • Music offline -> yt-dlp
  • Clients for offline music -> pc: rmpc phone:gramophone
  • communication -> signal, might change to molly
  • usage of localsend and syncthing, but syncthing is little buggy for me with long name files and permissions :/
  • amplitube plugin for guitar -> guitarix, which i used to under rate
  • want to move from discord -> element, but i have to try screensharing with audio and etc.
  • maybe will try to move from yt to peertube, but i think it lacks content. I have to dig deeper

Thats my list, tell me yours :)

  • BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago
    • OS - - > Linux OpenSuSE with KDE

    • YouTube - - > Freetube - opensource, private YouTube client for Linux, MacOS and Windows

    • Downloading music/videos --> yt-dlp

    • Downloading videos/images --> gallery-dl

    • Email - - > Thunderbird (really moved forward in last few years)

    • Notes - - > Joplin

    Selfhosting (mine is on raspberry pi) :

    • Streaming library - Jellyfin

    • Photo library - imich

    • Downloads - qbittorrent, prowlaar, radaar, sonaar, lazy librarian in a docker stack with VPN

    • smart home - Homeassistant

    • filesync - - > Syncthing (I don’t have problems with long file names - maybe a Windows issue or Linux FS? I use EXT4 on all my devices and don’t use Windows anymore)

  • GarbadgeGoober@feddit.org
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    8 hours ago

    Shazam --> Audile

    Microsoft Authenticator --> Aegis

    Password Manager --> KeepassDX( I use Syncthing to keep it up to date across my devices

    Weather App --> Cirrus

    Task Manager --> Task.org

    To use Google Maps links --> GeoShare

    In general there are a lot of good Apps on F-Droid. To keep it that way, please read this: KeepAndroidOpen

    Otherwise all those beautiful Apps from F-Droid will disappear.

    • DIY KARMA KIT@lemmy.mlOP
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      8 hours ago

      Thanks for the article, I heard about it but tbh i didnt think to do anything about it. Now i will look deeper into this and probably take part in it. Thanks again!

  • EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    9 hours ago
    • Google Maps: Switch to CoMaps, they’re a fork of Organic Maps that grew out of a transparency issue with the Organic Maps core developers
    • Youtube on pc: Not familiar with youtube-tui with mpv but FreeTube is pretty awesome too :3
    • Clients for offline music: I like kew (for PC) :3
    • Discord: Element is good, but in the interim you should check out Equibop! It’s a fork of the Discord client that strips out a lot of the telemetry.

    And regarding PeerTube, be aware that if you go into it expecting it to be a replacement for YouTube, you will always end up disappointed. YouTube is just too big and entrenched at this point and it’s just not possible for any site to be a straight-up 1:1 replacement.

    It’s kind of like renewable energy sources: no one method is going to supplant fossil fuels, but multiple different options being used where each is effective the most has worked quite well in putting a quite noticeable dent, even if not a large one, in the world’s usage of it. Likewise, PeerTube, Odyssey, Nebula, all the different sources cropping up will never replace YouTube individually, but collectively it will give people more options, which is always good.

    Likewise, I’ve found that PeerTube is great for discovering new content, but it requires a perspective change. Honestly it reminds me more of YouTube in its early days. Not a lot of high-cost productions, but more just regular people putting up videos because they have a passion for it and want to share that passion. For now, I still do use YouTube, but I am finding some great stuff here and there on PeerTube as well. I guess what I’m saying is PeerTube cannot be a replacement of YouTube, but it can be a supplement to YouTube, if you want it to be.

    Anyway, sorry for the ramble. Haha. Have a great day and good luck! _

    • DIY KARMA KIT@lemmy.mlOP
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      8 hours ago

      Google Maps: Switch to CoMaps, they’re a fork of Organic Maps that grew out of a transparency issue with the Organic Maps core developers

      Done

      I will try also this equibop, thanks :D

  • 𞋴𝛂𝛋𝛆@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    Pipe Pipe is better than Newpipe. I use F-droid’s VLC front end for local music because the built in android back end is VLC. For everything else, in browser

  • dreamos82@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Twitter, bsky, threads- > mastodon Office - > libreoffice Adobe indesign (not sure about the name) - > Scribus. Photpshop - > the gimp and krita

    I’m Lookong for a good alternative that i can evemtually self host of google docs

    • DIY KARMA KIT@lemmy.mlOP
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      10 hours ago

      I just installed gimp, and now im trying to do a thing called photogimp, which just makes photoshop layout in gim

      • Balldowern@lemmy.zip
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        8 hours ago

        Also try photopea. It’s a web application. The free version/community version is almost 80% as good as Photoshop.

        • DIY KARMA KIT@lemmy.mlOP
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          8 hours ago

          Yeah, i used it many times, but i always want native program and web apps doesnt feel snappy for me. Also heard about graphite-rs which looks promising but ita still in development and doesnt have native app yet

  • algernon@lemmy.ml
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    8 hours ago
    • Music -> Navidrome / mpd + various clients
    • Google maps -> When we’re driving, I have an offline GPS. Otherwise CoMaps.
    • Comms -> XMPP (Prosody on the server, Dino on Linux, Conversations on Android) & Signal (latter mostly at work)
    • Email -> self hosted (usual postfix + dovecot + rspamd + etc stack) with notmuch as my main client K9 on the phone
    • Authenticator -> Aegis
    • Password manager -> self-hosted VaultWarden
    • Google Reader (RIP) -> miniflux
    • Bookmarks -> Readeck
    • DIY KARMA KIT@lemmy.mlOP
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      8 hours ago

      Whats are pros of XMPP?

      Also could u tell me about self hosting cost and time you spend on it?

      I am planning on self hosting but dont know if i could afford it, mainly i would host lemmy instance, reverted dns, maybe peertube and matrix, and something to share files across my devices.

      • algernon@lemmy.ml
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        4 hours ago

        Whats are pros of XMPP?

        Pros of XMPP is that I can fully self host it, it can do video & audio calls too, and has good clients that aren’t just a webpage wrapped in Blink (aka, Electron). Matrix is a pain in the ass to self host, especially if I don’t want to federate. My XMPP server is private, friends & family can use it, and that’s it. That’s what I needed, and it delivered perfectly. It does End-to-End encryption. It is weaker than Signal, for sure, but it’s enough for what I need it for. In short: it’s reasonably simple to self host, has good, usable clients for both platforms I care about (Linux & Android), we can chat, we can have group chats, we can have audio & video calls.

        Also could u tell me about self hosting cost and time you spend on it?

        Well, I’ve been self-hosting since about 1998, so the time I spend on it nowadays is very little. One of my servers has been running for ~4 years without any significant change. I upgrade it once in a while, tweak my spam filters once a week or so, and go my merry way. I haven’t rebooted it in… checks uptime 983 days. Maybe I should. My other, newer server, is only about a year old - it took a LOT of time to set that up, and the first few months required a lot of time. But that was because I switched from Debian to NixOS, and had to figure out a lot of stuff. Nowadays, I run just sys update && just sys deploy (at home, on my desktop pc), and both my tiny VPS and my homelab is upgraded. I do tweak it from time to time - because I want to, and I enjoy doing so. I don’t have to. Strictly necessary maintenance time is about an hour a week if I try to be a good sysadmin, ~10-15 minutes otherwise. It Just Works™.

        As for costs: my setup is… complicated. I have a 2014-era Mac Mini in my home office, which hosts half my self-hosted things (Miniflux, Atuin server, EteBase, Grafana, Prometheus, ntfy, readeck, vaultwarden, victorialogs, and postgres to serve as a database for many of these). It’s power consumption is inconsequential, and the network traffic is negligible too - in a large part because I’m the primary user of it anyway. It is not connected to the public internet directly, however: I have an €5/month tiny VPS I rented from Hetzner, that fronts for it. The VPS runs WireGuard, and fronts the services on the Mac Mini through Caddy. iocaine takes care of the scrapers and other web-based annoyances (so hardly anything reaches my backend), unbound provides a resolver for my infra, vector ferries select logs from the VPS to VictoriaLogs in my homelab, and I’m running HAProxy to front for stuff Caddy isn’t good for (ie, anything other than http).

        Oh, yeah, I forgot… we have poweroutages here every once in a while, so I have to turn the mac mini back on once a month or so. It happens so rarely that I didn’t set up proper Clang + Tavis-based LUKS unlocking, so I have to plug a monitor and a keyboard in. It didn’t reach a level of annoying to make me address it properly.

        A bunch of my other services (GoToSocial, Forgejo + Forgejo runner, Minio [to be replaced with SeaweedFS or Garage], and my email) are still on an old server, because the mac mini doesn’t have enough juice to run them along with everything else it is already running. I plan to buy a refurbished ThinkCentre or similar, and host these in my homelab too. That’s going to be a notable up front cost, but as I plan to run the same thing for a decade, it will be a lot cheaper than paying for a similarly sized VPS for 10 years. The expensive part of this is storage (I have a lot of Stuff™), but only comparatively.

        By far the most expensive part of my self-hosting are backups. I like to have at least two backups (so three copies total, including the original) of important things, and that’s not cheap - I have a lot of data to backup (granted, that includes my music, photo & media library, both of which are large).