Is there some project that the opensource world is missing that you think it needs?

  • yourFanatic@sh.itjust.works
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    6 days ago

    Another good email client. Many are trying to leave Thunderbird on GNU Linux but there aren’t many to choose from.

  • Onno (VK6FLAB)@lemmy.radio
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    11 days ago

    Nothing and everything.

    There are thousands if not millions of open source solutions scattered around society. Some are feature complete, most are not. Some are maintained, many are not. A handful are funded, the rest is not.

    What open source needs, more than anything else is fundraising and the means to distribute those funds to the tune of the trillions of dollars that the corporate world extracts in profits from those open source efforts.

    In other words, the people who make this need to get paid.

    Firefox terms and conditions, Red Hat, and several other projects that have caused uproar through the community, are all caused by the need to get paid to eat food and have a roof over your head whilst you contribute to society and give away your efforts.

  • badcodecat@lemux.minnix.dev
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    11 days ago

    games! in maybe 95% of cases you can find an open alternative to some (non-game) software, but with games it’s the opposite.

    i would say that the main proprietary softwares i still use, are video games

    • JillyB@beehaw.org
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      11 days ago

      Disclaimer: I have no qualifications or really any business talking about this…

      I think games aren’t the best kind of projects for open source. Some games are made open source after development ends which is cool because it opens up forks and modding (pixel dungeon did this). Most games require a single, unified, creative vision which is hard to get from an “anyone can help” contribution style. Most open source software are tools for doing specific things. It’s almost objective what needs to be done to improve the software while games are much more opinionated and fuzzy. So many times I’ve seen a game’s community rally behind a suggestion to address a problem and the developer ignores them and implements a better idea to more elegantly solve it. Most people aren’t game designers but they feel like they could be.

      An exception to this are certain, rules-based puzzly games. Bit-Burner is an open source hacking game with relatively simple mechanics and it works well.

  • whatwemadeourselves@slrpnk.net
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    11 days ago

    A mesh network internet, it’s more of a hardware, security, and adoption problem but at this point there’s enough wifi overlap in most residential areas that entire towns could have their own local internet without needing the ISP model at all.

      • JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl
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        11 days ago

        Only Android Open Source Project, not the different phone UIs, vendor blobs, firmware, camera apps, etc… It is really the basics that are open source.

        But also the source of android is 100% controlled by google unless it is an alternative forked project like lineageOS (at least I think so)

      • frightful_hobgoblin@lemmy.ml
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        11 days ago

        That’s not untrue but phones are complex, requiring lots of components and drivers to work together, so it’s hard to get a fully free phone.

        • whatwemadeourselves@slrpnk.net
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          11 days ago

          If we started with a very basic, touch tone phone and worked from there it might be doable. Seems to me the hard part is breaking through the FCC/Cell company monopoly, so just focusing on how to contact a cell tower and make a voice phone call would be the key.

      • qpsLCV5@lemmy.ml
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        10 days ago

        android yes, but the entire google play ecosystem is not, and some things are very hard to do without being inside that ecosystem.

        I’m using my fairphone without any google account (so no play store), and it works, but there are some obstacles. Luckily my bank still offers a good website and even uses some international standard for 2 factor auth, so i can do my ebanking without the app - which, like most companies, is only offered in the play store.

        for public transport, i downloaded the app from apkpure (in hindsight, the aurora store would likely be the better option) and it works fine for buying tickets. this is just my lazyness, i could buy tickets on the website (but it sucks) or at ticket machines, but the app is super convenient.

        for various other services i just refuse to install apps. parking payments, my insurance company, work (luckily i have a bunch of freedom at work, using linux on my work laptop too)… is all stuff that would be convenient but it’s all just available in play store. it looks like aurora is a good option, but 1. i don’t know how long until google kills it and 2. i want to completely stop being dependent on adtech anyway.

  • Ray1992xD@feddit.nl
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    10 days ago

    The EU managed to get Meta on their knees with GDPR. They could force unlocked bootloader and easy install of any OS on phones just like on laptop/pc. I believe then we would really get the Linux phone movement going. Imagine: iPhone with UBports.

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    10 days ago

    Most anything related to healthcare:

    • System for medics and nurses to input all the data of a patient, which can be accessed by said patient if need be
    • System for keeping track of vaccines applied and pinging people who need to take more shots (second dose, reinforcement dose, etc)
    • drivers and programs to interact with medical equipment
    • Pup Biru@aussie.zone
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      10 days ago

      there’s actually a bunch of these, but healthcare tends to fall prey to “too much money, too many consultants, fancy brochures”

    • 0101100101@programming.devOP
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      10 days ago

      Healthcare normally have tight varying legal requirements that software must adhere to, so I would say there couldn’t be a single solution for multiple countries.

      • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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        10 days ago

        Gonna take a look at that one. Data migration from a 10+ years program would definitely be the second biggest pain, number one would be training staff to use it, but i do think it’d be worth it

        • Kornblumenratte@feddit.org
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          9 days ago

          Main problem with it is lack of certification, which prevents it’s use ironically in Germany, the country of origin. I would have loved to use it. If you live in a less–regulated health system, I wish you success!

          Data migration will be a huge problem – medical management system companies tend to lock their customers into their system by preventing data migration.

          I just didn’t bother with migration. I used an autohotkey script to print all patient charts of the old system into pdf files – unconvenient but failsave – and built the new data base from scratch.

          • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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            8 days ago

            In my case, it’d be an actual epic job, since I work for govt and we use an old version of TrakCare, which has been the source of a number of headaches for at least 7 years now

            I’m curious, which certifications does it lack such that Germany can’t use GNUMed?

            • Kornblumenratte@feddit.org
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              8 days ago

              TrakCare – wow, intersystem offers a bunch of data management software in > 20 countries.

              At first glance, TrakCare seems to be targeted at hospitals. GNUmed is targeted at small practices.

            • Kornblumenratte@feddit.org
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              8 days ago

              Billing the public health insurance. It’s perfectly usable for private practice, but there are only very few private only practices in Germany.

      • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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        10 days ago

        Yeah I have no hope for an American FOSS design.

        Perhaps an EU-backed one might appear at some point.

        Recently I stumbled upon a Chinese team working on a FOSS pair of cores, with source in GitHub. I think they were aiming at competing with A76 and N2. Supposedly they’re well underway.

        Found it

        If these guys (or any others) tape out a competitive FOSE chip, it’ll change the world. If it’s a decent project, everyone and their mother will fork it. And we’ll get chips that cost just a bit over the silicon and packaging cost.

  • hera@feddit.uk
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    10 days ago

    A printer or printer firmware. There was a discussion about this elsewhere on lemmy, of course this would be difficult and expensive but it would be very cool

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      10 days ago

      Some of the OLD HP Thinkjet printers were pretty rudimentary; the original Thinkjet cartridges are still widely manufactured for certain industrial applications. Tell me we couldn’t reprap that shit.

      • droplet6585@lemmy.ml
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        9 days ago

        A reprap style project could probably make a passable document printer- but what’s the appeal? People only work on those projects to make new or previously unobtainable machines available.

        I just don’t think it’d be worth the effort.

    • BaumGeist@lemmy.ml
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      10 days ago

      The biggest issue I see is that most of the tech is someone’s IP. If it’s not patented, it’s copyrighted or trademarked. Otherwise, it should be a doable PoC with old parts and a barebones firmware. I don’t need my FOSS printer to contend with Xerox, I just need it to poop out a page when I hit print.

      I’d also love to see a FOSS page description language that could dethrone Adobe’s PostScript and HP’s PCL as the standards.

  • golden_zealot@lemmy.ml
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    10 days ago

    At the minute, a true open source and free browser/web engine, though I know this is nigh impossible to maintain without thousands of people. Some part of me is hopeful though given recent events.

    • shirro@aussie.zone
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      10 days ago

      They exist. Firefox and chromium are open source. Big companies pay their dev costs but they can be forked. Chromium is a descendent of WebKit which is a descendent of khtml from the KDE project. The engines have been open source for decades It’s the proprietary crap they put on top which is the problem.

  • starshipwinepineapple@programming.dev
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    11 days ago

    It you’re looking for ideas-- Something you’re passionate about. Find a problem you’re having, fix it, and make it open source. That’s the best way to make sure whatever you do doesn’t get abandoned. Good luck

  • porcupine@lemmygrad.ml
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    10 days ago

    I’m always surprised that, for as widely used as PDFs are, there doesn’t seem to be any real alternative to Acrobat for editing existing PDFs.