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FossBase: Open Tech Tips
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[ Formerly @LinuxCentral ]
Your go-to hub for tech, tips, updates, and insights.
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Gradia: Make your screenshots ready for the world.

Gradia is a new screenshot tool for Linux with a key difference: it’s not a tool for taking screenshots but making screenshots look better for use in app store listings, blog posts, social media posts etc., without needing to use fully-featured image editing software.

Source
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Packet: Quick Share client for Linux

A partial implementation of Google's Quick Share protocol that lets you send and receive files wirelessly from Android devices using Quick Share, or another device with Packet.

GitHub | FlatHub
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OpenDia: The open alternative to Dia
Connect your browser to AI models. No browser switching needed—works seamlessly with any Chromium browser including Chrome & Arc.


GitHub Repository
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FossBase Weekly Digest (July 7–13, 2025)

1. Surge in Malicious Open Source Packages
Sonatype’s Q2 2025 Open Source Malware Index reported a 188% increase in malicious open-source packages, with 16,279 threats across npm, PyPI, and Maven Central, 55% targeting data theft.
Source

2. Tether to Open Source Bitcoin Mining Software
Tether plans to open-source its Bitcoin Mining Operating System (MOS) by Q4 2025, aiming to enhance efficiency for small-scale miners holding 54.6% market share.
Source

3. Kanvas: New Incident Response Tool
Kanvas, a Python-based open-source incident response case management tool, was released with a simple desktop interface for cybersecurity workflows.
Source

4. Anubis Blocks AI Scrapers
Anubis, an open-source tool by Xe Iaso to protect websites from AI bot scrapers, has nearly 200,000 downloads, addressing privacy concerns in FOSS ecosystems.
Source

5. Linux Desktop Market Share Hits 5%
Linux achieved a 5% desktop market share, driven by adoption in government and enterprise sectors, a significant milestone for FOSS.
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6. Xlibre Fork Advances
Xlibre, a fork of X.org X11 server, released updates to support legacy FOSS applications, gaining traction with distros like Devuan.
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7. FOSS Weekly Newsletter Highlights
FOSS Weekly featured Xfce customization, CoMaps, disk cleanup tools, and deprecated Linux commands, providing practical FOSS guides.
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8. Upcoming FOSS Conferences
SciPy, Beam Summit, DebConf, GUADEC, and FOSSY were highlighted as 2025 events to foster FOSS collaboration and innovation.
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9. Open Source AI CLI Tools Gain Popularity
Google’s Gemini CLI, an open-source AI tool for developer terminals, saw increased adoption alongside FOSS tools like Ollama.
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10. LibreOffice 25.2 Beta Released
LibreOffice 25.2 Beta introduced improved dark mode, accessibility enhancements, and new noscripting features for FOSS productivity.
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Rio is a hardware-accelerated GPU terminal emulator. It is designed to be fast and efficient, with a focus on performance and usability.

Rio is built using the latest technologies, including Rust and WebGPU, to provide a modern and responsive user experience. It supports a wide range of features, including split panes, tabs, and customizable themes.

Rio is open source and available for Windows, macOS, and Linux.


FlatHub | GitHub | Website
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Intel’s Cost-Cutting Measures Lead to Clear Linux Shutdown

Intel has abruptly ended support for Clear Linux OS, a high-performance Linux distribution optimized for Intel hardware, as of July 18, 2025. The project, which focused on cloud computing, DevOps, and security, will no longer receive updates or security patches, and its GitHub repository is now read-only. Intel recommends users migrate to another actively maintained Linux distribution to ensure security and stability. Despite the shutdown, Intel remains committed to supporting the Linux ecosystem through other open-source projects.

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You Can Now Disable All AI Features in Zed

Zed developers have finally added a way to easily disable all AI functionality if so desired.
There is now a "disable_ai" global setting that can be enabled to turn off all AI features -- beginning in today's preview build and expected to be in a stable release next week.


Source
Firefox 141 can now organize your tabs into groups using AI, and more

You can now partially automate the organization of multiple tabs in tab groups with AI support. A local AI model (which doesn’t send any information to the cloud and thus preserves privacy) can automatically group similar tabs and suggest suitable names for the tab group. Mozilla will be gradually rolling out this feature over the next few weeks.
Furthermore, if you use the vertical tabs layout introduced in Firefox 136, you can now create more space for even more tabs by minimizing the toolbar at the bottom of the sidebar.


Mozilla plans to release the next versions—including Firefox 142 and Firefox ESR 140.2, ESR 128.14, and ESR 115.27—on August 19th, 2025. Firefox ESR 128 will receive its last update in August, as will Firefox ESR 115 (subject to Mozilla’s pending decision).

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Proton launches privacy-respecting encrypted AI assistant Lumo

Lumo is based on open-source large language models (LLMs) and utilizes Proton's open-source encryption scheme. Proton also released the tool's complete source code, so it's fully transparent to the community.

Lumo's default setting is not to search online, delete all chats upon closing, and not store conversations on the server-side.

"Other AI companies keep a record of all your conversations on their servers, leaving this information vulnerable to data leaks or exploitation for profit," reads the announcement.

"Lumo doesn't keep any logs of your conversations server side, and any chats you save can only be decrypted on your device."

Lumo's interface resembles those of mainstream LLM services, while the tool supports file uploads with full encryption support.


Source
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Figma’s AI app building tool is now available for everyone

Figma Make, the prompt-to-app coding tool that Figma introduced earlier this year, is now available for all users. Similar to AI coding tools like Google’s Gemini Code Assist and Microsoft’s GitHub Copilot, Figma Make allows users to build working prototypes and apps using natural language denoscriptions, instead of needing to have innate coding skills.

While Figma initially launched it in beta for “Full Seat” users — the subnoscription tier required to unlock all of Figma’s design products — Figma Make can now be accessed by all Figma users, with limitations in place depending on the user’s subnoscription plan. The ability to publish designs created by Figma Make, which is currently still in beta, will be restricted to users with Full Seat access. Users on View, Collab, Dev, and free Starter Seat plans will be limited to experimenting with Figma Make in their personal drafts.


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The Debian Wiki is set to get a revamp as the project transitions to MediaWiki, leaving behind the aging MoinMoin platform.

Members of the Debian project have launched an ambitious new initiative: to rebuild the Debian Wiki from the ground up using a whole new solution—MediaWiki, a modern, free, and open-source platform for collaboration and documentation that’s widely used across today’s web.

Source
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Euphonica is a new, visually striking Music Player Daemon (MPD) frontend for Linux, built with Rust, GTK4, and libadwaita. It emphasizes a modern, album art-focused UI with animated flourishes and efficient background blur powered by libblur’s stack blur. Key features include a responsive interface, MPD password storage in the login keyring, and efficient command processing. It supports browsing by album, artist, and folder, with planned genre-based browsing and advanced querying. Designed for Beets-tagged libraries, it fetches accurate metadata and supports MPRIS integration. Currently in early development, it’s only tested on Arch Linux and requires building from source, with AUR and Flathub releases planned.

Source
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Picture Desktop Widget for GNOME Shell

A GNOME Shell extension that creates a desktop widget which displays a random image that switch after a given time by choosing a picture in a given folder. The widget can be resized, moved and the corner radius can be changed. The timeout for a new image is also customizable.

GitHub | Gnome Extensions
Introducing Proton Authenticator – secure 2FA, your way

Proton Authenticator is a new, free, open-source 2FA app launched by Proton, available on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and Linux. It generates time-based one-time passwords (TOTPs) for secure logins, offering end-to-end encrypted backups and cross-device sync without ads or tracking. Users can import 2FA codes from apps like Google Authenticator and Microsoft Authenticator, and it works offline. Built for privacy, it doesn’t require a Proton account, though syncing needs one. Ideal for anyone seeking a secure, transparent 2FA solution.

Source | Download
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Pano Scrobbler Released 4.x bringing support to Linux and Windows

Rewritten in Compose Multiplatform, now supports Android, Windows, Linux.
New: Material 3 UI, persistent notification (Android 14+), QR login for
last.fm/libre.fm on TV, network import/export, Audile music recognition.
Scrobbling: Apple Music, Spotify, and more with artist/album data from iTunes/Spotify APIs.
Improvements: Regex scrobble blocking, pending scrobble timestamps, GitHub auto-updates (desktop), UI tweaks.
Removed: In-app mic scrobble, native Maloja, TV editing, Android 6 support.
Fixes: Scrobble edits, UI bugs, segfaults, duplicate scrobbles.

Source | GitHub
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Type Sloppy, Find Apps Fast: GNOME Fuzzy Search Extension

A new Fuzzy Application Search extension for GNOME Shell lets you find apps even with typos, unlike GNOME's default precise search. It supports GNOME 48 and 49 (Ubuntu 25.10) and uses a ranking system similar to TextMate/Sublime Text. Ideal for inattentive typists or those with dyslexia, it’s available on the GNOME Extensions hub. This fills a gap since GNOME Shell lacks native fuzzy matching, a feature requested since 2016.

Source | Gnome Extensions
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Firefox 142 Drops: AI-Powered Previews, Tab Groups, and Smarter Tracking Protection!

Firefox 142 is out with fresh features! US users can now curate New Tab stories by topics like Sports or Food, follow favorites, and block unwanted ones. Link Previews are stable—right-click a link for a thumbnail, denoscription, and AI-generated key points (needs 3GB+ RAM, rolling out in USA, Canada, UK, Australia). Extensions can use local AI models via the wllama API. Tab Groups keep one active tab visible when collapsed, and Enhanced Tracking Protection adds flexible exception lists to avoid breaking websites.
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