Note: I have no affiliation with any of this stuff, it's just stuff I use/like/etc
- TODO: Stuff I haven't tried but need to check out in no particular order
- Milkdown
- A plugin driven framework to build WYSIWYG Markdown editor.
- Lexical
- "An extensible text editor framework that does things differently"
- BookStack
- a simple, self-hosted, easy-to-use platform for organising and storing information
- lossless-cut
- the swiss army knife of lossless video/audio editing
- OpenCut
- The open-source CapCut alternative
- shotcut
- cross-platform open-source video editor
- Plain text accounting
like hledger
- a way of doing bookkeeping and accounting with plain text files and scriptable, command-line-friendly software
- Home Assistant
- Open source home automation
- Stoat
- an open-source, user-first chat platform
- OpenTofu
- FOSS Fork of terraform
- gopass
- local password manager
- Fyne
- A crossplatform GUI toolkit for Go
- Authelia
- an open-source authentication and authorization server
- KeyCloak
- Open Source Identity and Access Management
- Zitadel
- Identity infrastructure, simplified for you
- AngelScript
- an extremely flexible cross-platform scripting library designed to allow applications to extend their functionality through external scripts
- Awesome Stuff I use in no particular order
- Arch Linux
- a lightweight and flexible Linux distribution that tries to Keep It Simple (I use Arch BTW)
- Linux Kernel
- the most widely used OS kernel in the world AND it's FOSS
- OpenWRT
- a highly extensible GNU/Linux distribution for embedded devices (typically wireless routers)
- GrapheneOS
- secure android release (though it's not yet my daily driver)
- Docker
- build, share, run, and verify applications anywhere
- Podman
- rootless docker containers
- C lang
- about as low and simple as you can get without writing assembly
- Go lang
- Built-in concurrency and a robust standard library
- Python lang
- the original batteries included language
- PostgreSQL
- The World's Most Advanced Open Source Relational Database
- Jellyfin
- The Free Software Media System
- Git
- free and open source distributed version control
- Forgejo
- self-hosted lightweight software forge
- CyberChef
- The Cyber Swiss Army Knife
- KDE
- an international free software community that develops free and open-source software
- Godot
- Your free, open‑source game engine
- Vim
- the ubiquitous text editor
- Xonsh
- a Python-powered shell
- Bash
- the Bourne Again SHell
- Zsh
- like fancy Bash
- grml-zsh-config
- nice default config for Zsh
- Blender
- free and open-source 3D computer graphics software tool set
- GIMP
- the GNU Image Manipulation Program a free and open-source raster graphics editor
- Caddy
- The ULTIMATE SERVER
- nginx
- an HTTP web server, reverse proxy, content cache, load balancer, TCP/UDP proxy server, and mail proxy server
- Flameshot
- Powerful, yet simple to use open-source screenshot software
- FFMpeg
- A complete, cross-platform solution to record, convert and stream audio and video
- toolbx
- run containers that have access to your windowing system
- wireguard
- an extremely simple yet fast and modern VPN
- Audacity
- the world's most popular audio editing and recording app
- Kdenlive
- advanced video editing application
- OBS Studio
- Free and open source software for video recording and live streaming
- drawio
- a JavaScript, client-side editor for general diagramming
- GPG
- a complete and free implementation of the OpenPGP standard as defined by RFC4880
- Pico CSS
- Minimal CSS Framework for Semantic HTML
- Luxon
- A powerful, modern, and friendly wrapper for JavaScript dates and times
- Tabulator
- Easy to use, simple to code, fully featured, interactive JavaScript tables and data grids
- Choices.js
- a lightweight, configurable select box/text input plugin
- Obtainium
- Get Android app updates straight from the source
- Feeder
- Android feed reader app
- Barcode Scanner
- An open-source app that allows you to read and generate barcodes for Android.
- localsend
- An open-source cross-platform alternative to AirDrop
- necessary evils[1] I use in no particular order
- Terraform
- a source-available tool that codifies APIs into declarative configuration files
- PowerShell
- a shell from M$
- Google Chrome
- the most popular web browser by Google
- Chromium
- an open-source browser project
- Rundeck
- the orchestration tool for all of your existing automation
- VSCode
or VSCodium
- code editor from M$
- misc links of interest to me in no particular order
[1]: "evils" here should be taken with a grain of salt, I just personally don't like something about it like the licence, company, perfomance, language, or whatever... but I still use it if it's on this list...