Hello, I’d like to know your top open-source apps that you use every day. Here are mine:
Signal AntennaPod RadioDroid Which ones do you use most often?
The apps I actually use daily:
- Firefox
- uBlock
- Vs code
- Notepad++
- Revanced (i might patch something every second month but I use the apps it has patched daily)
- PuTTY
- moonlight/sunshine
- 7zip
- qBittorrent
The apps I wish I had time to use daily:
- Godot
- Blender
- Krita
- libResprite
Edit: I forgot:
- WinSCP
- VLC
VS code is technically not open-source since it has many proprietary blobs on top. VScodium is the fully open-source version.
I don’t know how much can Revanced be considered open-source except for their Revanced manager app since you still use the patched versions of the proprietary Google apps.
Sorry for being pedantic.
How’s your experience with Moonshine / Sunshine? Latency on local network?
Not OP, but in my house we’re very happy with it. Will even work nicely over WiFi, though you do have to manually turn all the settings down for that.
Desktop
- Arch Linux
- GNOME
- Firefox
- Tilix
- Thunderbird or Evolution
- Vim (I still use PyCharm for writing code)
- Joplin
- Bitwarden
- Python
Phone
- Joplin
- Firefox Focus & Firefox
- Bitwarden
- New Pipe
- Thunderbird (K-9 Mail)
- Signal
- Aegis
- Antenna Pod
- VLC
- The FOSSify suite (not the dialer)
I made my own curated list of open source software. Most of the software on there is stuff I use.
On my mobile with GrapheneOS:
- Aard 2 (dictionary, since QuickDic doesn’t seem to work on my Pixel 7)
- Breezy Weather
- Fossify Suite (Calendar, Clock, Contacts, Gallery, Messages, Notes)
- Currencies
- DAVx5 (calendar sync)
- Feeder (RSS)
- FUTO keyboard
- Hypatia (malware scanner)
- Island (work profile enabler)
- K-9 Mail
- KeePassDX
- Molly (Signal fork)
- Music Player
- Nextcloud
- Obtainium (update apps from source)
- Oeffi (public transport)
- OSMAnd
- Planisphere
- StreetComplete
- Threema Libre
- Tor
- Tusky (Mastodon)
- Vanadium (GOS Browser)
- Voyager (Lemmy)
- Who Bird (bird call identifier)
More FOSS apps on my notebooks with Fedora, but not on a daily basis.
On my laptop:
- Void Linux
- GNOME (desktop environment)
- gThumb (image viewer that can do simple edits)
- Firefox (the famous web browser)
- uBlock Origin (content blocker that blocks ads, trackers, etc. out of the box)
- SponsorBlock (automatically skips sponsor segments in YouTube videos)
- Betterbird (fork of the Thunderbird email client, with various QoL tweaks)
- GIMP (image editor)
- Kdenlive (video editor)
- virt-manager (manage QEMU virtual machines)
- Celluloid (media player)
- yt-dlp (command-line utility for downloading YouTube videos, and the basis of some graphical apps as well)
- Bottles (if you want to use Wine to run Windows apps, without too many headaches)
- Foliate (.epub ebook reader)
- OBS (for screen recording and livestreaming)
- Code - OSS (code editor, “clean” version of Visual Studio Code without “Microsoft-specific customizations”)
- Tenacity (fork of the Audacity audio editor without opt-out telemetry)
On my Android phone:
- F-Droid (app store with FOSS apps only)
- Obtainium (auto-updater for apps hosted on GitHub, GitLab, etc.)
- Heliboard (simple keyboard app)
- Material Files (file manager)
- Metro (local music library player)
- Iceraven (Firefox fork with a few tweaks)
- Voyager (mobile client for Lemmy, similar to the obsolete Reddit clients Apollo and Slide)
- Fedilab (client for Mastodon and similar Fediverse services)
- Termux (run Linux CLI applications on Android)
- Thunderbird for Android (simple email client for Android and the successor to K-9 Mail)
- MJ PDF Reader
- Binary Eye (simple QR code scanner)
Cross-platform:
- LocalSend (simple file transfer between devices on the same network)
- Bitwarden client apps (to manage passwords. I use the Vaultwarden instance @ tchncs.de)
- Mullvad VPN client
If we can count FOSS modifications of proprietary apps:
- YouTube Revanced (the official YouTube app, but you don’t get ads, you can play videos in the background, you get SponsorBlock, etc.) (follow this guide for auto-updates)
- Vesktop (desktop client for Discord, has Vencord preinstalled and supports Linux screen sharing)
- Prism Launcher (Minecraft: Java Edition launcher that allows you to easily manage different “instances” of the game. Good for playing with different mods and/or versions)
- Fabulously Optimized (modpack for Minecraft: Java Edition, that improves performance and adds some minor QoL features)
addendum: I’d like to use Matrix (via the Element client) and Signal more, but most of the people I know are on Discord and WhatsApp instead.