Umihi Music, my new Android YouTube Music Player
Hey guys, I just published the first build for my Android YouTube Music Player called Umihi Music. It's similar to InnerTune, ViMusic, SimpMusic and others in the same kind, but I focused on making my app extremely lightweight, fast, simple and reliable. The app is currently very bare-bones, but I am planning to add a bunch of features in the future.
If you're interested in checking it out, here are all the usefull links :
Github : https://github.com/ilianoKokoro/umihi-music/
F-Droid (IzzyDroid) : https://apt.izzysoft.de/packages/ca.ilianokokoro.umihi.music
If you encounter any bugs with the app, please make a GitHub Issue so I can work on making the app better for everyone. I hope you guys enjoy.
https://redd.it/1nflejm
@r_opensource
Hey guys, I just published the first build for my Android YouTube Music Player called Umihi Music. It's similar to InnerTune, ViMusic, SimpMusic and others in the same kind, but I focused on making my app extremely lightweight, fast, simple and reliable. The app is currently very bare-bones, but I am planning to add a bunch of features in the future.
If you're interested in checking it out, here are all the usefull links :
Github : https://github.com/ilianoKokoro/umihi-music/
F-Droid (IzzyDroid) : https://apt.izzysoft.de/packages/ca.ilianokokoro.umihi.music
If you encounter any bugs with the app, please make a GitHub Issue so I can work on making the app better for everyone. I hope you guys enjoy.
https://redd.it/1nflejm
@r_opensource
GitHub
GitHub - ilianoKokoro/umihi-music: A simple Material YouTube Music player for Android made in Kotlin and Jetpack Compose
A simple Material YouTube Music player for Android made in Kotlin and Jetpack Compose - ilianoKokoro/umihi-music
IBM AI Research Releases Two English Granite Embedding Models, Both Based on the ModernBERT Architecture
https://www.marktechpost.com/2025/09/12/ibm-ai-research-releases-two-english-granite-embedding-models-both-based-on-the-modernbert-architecture/
https://redd.it/1nfnxfn
@r_opensource
https://www.marktechpost.com/2025/09/12/ibm-ai-research-releases-two-english-granite-embedding-models-both-based-on-the-modernbert-architecture/
https://redd.it/1nfnxfn
@r_opensource
MarkTechPost
IBM AI Research Releases Two English Granite Embedding Models, Both Based on the ModernBERT Architecture
IBM releases Granite R2 embedding models with 8K context, efficient retrieval performance, CPU/GPU optimization, and Apache 2.0 licensing
Open Source Chrome Extension for Visual Web Scraping – Self-Host or Use Cloud
Hi everyone!
I just released OnPage.dev, an open-source Chrome extension for visual web scraping.
Key features:
Select elements visually with hover highlights
Smart scraping with auto-scroll
Export data to CSV or JSON
Run locally with Node.js backend or use the hosted cloud version at onpage.dev
The extension is fully open-source, so you can self-host and keep your data private.
GitHub: https://github.com/OnPage-Scraper/OnPage-Scraper
I’d love feedback, suggestions, and contributions. Open to feature ideas, improvements, and bug reports!
Legal note: Please scrape responsibly and respect site terms of service.
https://redd.it/1nfrpk1
@r_opensource
Hi everyone!
I just released OnPage.dev, an open-source Chrome extension for visual web scraping.
Key features:
Select elements visually with hover highlights
Smart scraping with auto-scroll
Export data to CSV or JSON
Run locally with Node.js backend or use the hosted cloud version at onpage.dev
The extension is fully open-source, so you can self-host and keep your data private.
GitHub: https://github.com/OnPage-Scraper/OnPage-Scraper
I’d love feedback, suggestions, and contributions. Open to feature ideas, improvements, and bug reports!
Legal note: Please scrape responsibly and respect site terms of service.
https://redd.it/1nfrpk1
@r_opensource
OnPage Cloud
OnPage Cloud - Professional Web Scraping | OnPage Cloud
OnPage Cloud - Fast, privacy-first web scraping platform for teams and professionals.
QRPorter — local Wi-Fi file transfer via QR (PC ↔ Mobile)
I built QRPorter, a small open-source utility that moves files between desktop and mobile over your LAN/Wi-Fi using QR codes. No cloud, no mobile app, no accounts — just scan & transfer.
# Features
- PC → Mobile file transfer: select a file on your desktop, generate a QR code, scan with your phone and download the file in the phone browser.
- Mobile → PC file transfer: scan the QR on the PC, open the link on your phone, upload a file from the phone and it’s saved on the PC.
- No extra mobile apps / accounts — works via the phone’s browser and the desktop app.
- Local-first — traffic stays on your Wi-Fi/LAN (no cloud).
- Cross-platform — desktop UI + web interface works with modern mobile browsers (Windows / macOS / Linux / iOS / Android).
# Requirements & tested platforms
- Python 3.12+ and
- Tested on Windows 11 and Linux; macOS should work.
- Key Python deps:
# Installation
You can install from PyPI:
~~~bash
pip install qrporter
~~~
After install, run:
~~~bash
qrporter
~~~
# Troubleshooting
- Make sure both devices are on the same Wi-Fi/LAN (guest/isolated networks often block local traffic).
- Maximum 1 GB file size limit and commonly used file types allowed.
- One file at a time. For multiple files, zip them and transfer the zip.
# License
- MIT License
# GitHub
https://github.com/manikandancode/qrporter
If you try it out — I’d love feedback, issues, or ideas for improvements. I beautified and commented the code using AI to improve readability and inline documentation. Thanks! 🙏
https://redd.it/1nfutc3
@r_opensource
I built QRPorter, a small open-source utility that moves files between desktop and mobile over your LAN/Wi-Fi using QR codes. No cloud, no mobile app, no accounts — just scan & transfer.
# Features
- PC → Mobile file transfer: select a file on your desktop, generate a QR code, scan with your phone and download the file in the phone browser.
- Mobile → PC file transfer: scan the QR on the PC, open the link on your phone, upload a file from the phone and it’s saved on the PC.
- No extra mobile apps / accounts — works via the phone’s browser and the desktop app.
- Local-first — traffic stays on your Wi-Fi/LAN (no cloud).
- Cross-platform — desktop UI + web interface works with modern mobile browsers (Windows / macOS / Linux / iOS / Android).
# Requirements & tested platforms
- Python 3.12+ and
pip. - Tested on Windows 11 and Linux; macOS should work.
- Key Python deps:
Flask, PySide6, qrcode, Werkzeug, Pillow.# Installation
You can install from PyPI:
~~~bash
pip install qrporter
~~~
After install, run:
~~~bash
qrporter
~~~
# Troubleshooting
- Make sure both devices are on the same Wi-Fi/LAN (guest/isolated networks often block local traffic).
- Maximum 1 GB file size limit and commonly used file types allowed.
- One file at a time. For multiple files, zip them and transfer the zip.
# License
- MIT License
# GitHub
https://github.com/manikandancode/qrporter
If you try it out — I’d love feedback, issues, or ideas for improvements. I beautified and commented the code using AI to improve readability and inline documentation. Thanks! 🙏
https://redd.it/1nfutc3
@r_opensource
GitHub
GitHub - manikandancode/qrporter: QRPorter — Local Wi‑Fi QR File Transfer
QRPorter — Local Wi‑Fi QR File Transfer. Contribute to manikandancode/qrporter development by creating an account on GitHub.
How should open source contributors be rewarded—equity, payments, or something else?
We’ve been thinking a lot about how to go beyond the usual “thanks!” and actually reward contributors in a more meaningful way. We are building an enterprise offering on the project and I want to share the upside with our community. Opensource is one of the greatest parts of software, but I feel like there are a lot of great contributors that keep everything afloat without $$.
One big motivator for contributing to open source is *using* the software for your own business/project—that’s a natural alignment. But then there are the weekend warriors who just like a project, and I feel like if **we’re building on top of their work, they should get a slice of the pie too.**
Some ideas I’m considering:
* **Equity pool:** Treat contributors a bit like advisors—award equity in the parent company for quality contributions. More long-term buy-in, but how do you set the floor? Does *every* contributor get some?
* **Cash bounties:** Have a pool of money and a list of high-priority issues with $$ attached. Motivating, but feels more transactional and short-term. I've seen this with mixed results.
* **Hybrid / tiered model:** Almost like Kickstarter rewards. Contribute a bit → recognition/merch. Contribute a lot → cash. Contribute consistently → equity.
The worry is making everything too transactional—e.g., people stop reporting bugs because “they’ll just post it with a bounty next week.” Equity feels like stronger buy-in, but it’s complicated. Equity only pays out if everything goes great, otherwise its worth 0.
Has anyone here seen a good model for this? How do you balance building a strong community with fairly rewarding people whose code you actually use?
https://redd.it/1ng0etp
@r_opensource
We’ve been thinking a lot about how to go beyond the usual “thanks!” and actually reward contributors in a more meaningful way. We are building an enterprise offering on the project and I want to share the upside with our community. Opensource is one of the greatest parts of software, but I feel like there are a lot of great contributors that keep everything afloat without $$.
One big motivator for contributing to open source is *using* the software for your own business/project—that’s a natural alignment. But then there are the weekend warriors who just like a project, and I feel like if **we’re building on top of their work, they should get a slice of the pie too.**
Some ideas I’m considering:
* **Equity pool:** Treat contributors a bit like advisors—award equity in the parent company for quality contributions. More long-term buy-in, but how do you set the floor? Does *every* contributor get some?
* **Cash bounties:** Have a pool of money and a list of high-priority issues with $$ attached. Motivating, but feels more transactional and short-term. I've seen this with mixed results.
* **Hybrid / tiered model:** Almost like Kickstarter rewards. Contribute a bit → recognition/merch. Contribute a lot → cash. Contribute consistently → equity.
The worry is making everything too transactional—e.g., people stop reporting bugs because “they’ll just post it with a bounty next week.” Equity feels like stronger buy-in, but it’s complicated. Equity only pays out if everything goes great, otherwise its worth 0.
Has anyone here seen a good model for this? How do you balance building a strong community with fairly rewarding people whose code you actually use?
https://redd.it/1ng0etp
@r_opensource
Reddit
From the opensource community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the opensource community
Open source NPM package for collecting visual feedback — Launching New Features
Hi Community, I'm building an open-source tool that will enable you to receive direct feedback from users on your website. I launched the tool in July. Since then, I have talked to many of you and now releasing new features and improvements.
New features:
1. Get User Email: You can follow up with users.
2. Show Notification: You can motivate users.
Improvement:
1. The widget button has multiple position options
2. Now you can set class names for all the elements
3. Form Modal changes position to left and right too.
4. On layout shift, the selected area also shifts.
5. Readme has clear instructions for self-hosting 👈
ASK: Please try the tool, share more feedback.
Repo: Github.com/satyamskillz/react-roast
https://redd.it/1ng3zz6
@r_opensource
Hi Community, I'm building an open-source tool that will enable you to receive direct feedback from users on your website. I launched the tool in July. Since then, I have talked to many of you and now releasing new features and improvements.
New features:
1. Get User Email: You can follow up with users.
2. Show Notification: You can motivate users.
Improvement:
1. The widget button has multiple position options
2. Now you can set class names for all the elements
3. Form Modal changes position to left and right too.
4. On layout shift, the selected area also shifts.
5. Readme has clear instructions for self-hosting 👈
ASK: Please try the tool, share more feedback.
Repo: Github.com/satyamskillz/react-roast
https://redd.it/1ng3zz6
@r_opensource
GitHub
GitHub - satyamskillz/react-roast: A Tool for UI/UX testing, feedback collection, and debugging user interfaces.
A Tool for UI/UX testing, feedback collection, and debugging user interfaces. - satyamskillz/react-roast
I built Supacrawler, an lightweight Go service for web scraping, crawling, screenshots, and monitoring
Hey r/opensource,
I’ve been working on Supacrawler, a fully open-source and lightweight project in Go for web scraping, crawling, screenshots, and monitoring.
It’s built with concurrency in mind (goroutines + Redis/Asynq for job scheduling) and ships with Playwright support for handling JS-heavy sites. It exposes a small set of REST endpoints like:
`/scrape` – extract structured content (Markdown, JSON, HTML, link maps)
`/screenshots` – full-page rendering with Playwright
I recently put together local benchmarks comparing SupaCrawler with Selenium, Beautifulsoup, and Playwright on python. Everything is open source (Apache 2.0) and contributions or feature requests are welcome!
Here's the GitHub link: https://github.com/antoineross/supacrawler
Thanks for checking it out! Always curious to hear how people would use a tool like this or what features would be most useful
https://redd.it/1ng57ol
@r_opensource
Hey r/opensource,
I’ve been working on Supacrawler, a fully open-source and lightweight project in Go for web scraping, crawling, screenshots, and monitoring.
It’s built with concurrency in mind (goroutines + Redis/Asynq for job scheduling) and ships with Playwright support for handling JS-heavy sites. It exposes a small set of REST endpoints like:
`/scrape` – extract structured content (Markdown, JSON, HTML, link maps)
/crawl – distributed crawling with depth/link controls`/screenshots` – full-page rendering with Playwright
/watch – detect and notify on site changes (this is on app only for now)I recently put together local benchmarks comparing SupaCrawler with Selenium, Beautifulsoup, and Playwright on python. Everything is open source (Apache 2.0) and contributions or feature requests are welcome!
Here's the GitHub link: https://github.com/antoineross/supacrawler
Thanks for checking it out! Always curious to hear how people would use a tool like this or what features would be most useful
https://redd.it/1ng57ol
@r_opensource
Reddit
r/opensource
A subreddit for everything open source related (for this context, we go off the definition of open source here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_source)
I built LibrePoly, An open-source learning platform that aims to teach almost anything!
https://69420gaming.github.io/librepoly/
https://redd.it/1ng7hvo
@r_opensource
https://69420gaming.github.io/librepoly/
https://redd.it/1ng7hvo
@r_opensource
Is this the fate of FOSS android apps?
https://www.reddit.com/r/androidapps/comments/1ng7olv/is_this_the_fate_of_foss_android_apps/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=mweb3x&utm_name=mweb3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button
https://redd.it/1ng7q8i
@r_opensource
https://www.reddit.com/r/androidapps/comments/1ng7olv/is_this_the_fate_of_foss_android_apps/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=mweb3x&utm_name=mweb3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button
https://redd.it/1ng7q8i
@r_opensource
Reddit
From the androidapps community on Reddit: Is this the fate of FOSS android apps?
Explore this post and more from the androidapps community
Squiggle - open-source Grammarly
I used to pay for Grammarly Pro but didn't renew a couple months ago. While writing a blog post today, I thought: why not just build my own AI-assisted grammar tool where I can plug in my own API key for spelling and phrasing suggestions?
So I built one this afternoon. It works pretty well already, though there’s plenty of room to improve.
Feel free to try it out, fork it, or send a PR (will review when I can):
https://squiggle.sethmorton.com
https://github.com/sethmorton/squiggle
https://redd.it/1ng8g7p
@r_opensource
I used to pay for Grammarly Pro but didn't renew a couple months ago. While writing a blog post today, I thought: why not just build my own AI-assisted grammar tool where I can plug in my own API key for spelling and phrasing suggestions?
So I built one this afternoon. It works pretty well already, though there’s plenty of room to improve.
Feel free to try it out, fork it, or send a PR (will review when I can):
https://squiggle.sethmorton.com
https://github.com/sethmorton/squiggle
https://redd.it/1ng8g7p
@r_opensource
OpenSplit - Cross Platform Split timer with a big focus on customization via CSS. Free, open source, looking for development help (and testers soon!)
Hi friends, I've got a lot of friends who run on Linux and Mac and are somewhat frustrated by the options that are out there, and even on Windows I was really looking for something a little more modern looking/feeling than LiveSplit to shake things up, so I decided to make one: https://github.com/ZellyDev-Games/OpenSplit
To be clear, this is not a usable product yet, it's pretty close to an alpha. This post is geared for developers who might be interested in helping, and people interested in testing in a few weeks.
Where I'm hoping to bring interest is
CSS styling with drop in skins (it's a Wails app, so the backend is Go, and the frontend is a React app, so web developers in particular will feel at home)
Cross platform, with working global hotkeys (Windows done, need someone good with mac/X APIs. I think Wayland is dead in the water, but knowledgeable folks would be great to talk to!)
Free, open source, permissive license. Do what you want with it.
Where the project is at
Very early development. To reiterate this post is geared towards developers who want to contribute or runners who might be interested in testing in a few weeks.
Basic UX/UI skeleton, you can open it, create split files, operate the timer, etc
Basic data models and file/IO to persist them
Pretty decent unit tests
What the project needs
Anyone interested who knows or wants to learn Go and React (with typenoscript)
MacOS developers. The hotkey system provided by Wails wasn't sufficient, so I made a platform specific system for Windows witht he Win32 API. This needs to be replicated on macOS and Linux
Linux developers. Largely for the same reason, specifically if you can think of a global hotkey solution for Wayland
Testers, but not quite yet. In a few weeks it could be ready to hand off for some VERY early alpha/dev preview testing.
Auto splitting. I don't even know where to start with this yet :D
How to get involved
Best place is the ZellyDev Games discord: discord gg slash xcrHKCsGmv select the "OpenSplit" option from the onboarding screen
Check out the README, CONTRIBUTING, and getting_started at the project's github: https://github.com/ZellyDev-Games/OpenSplit
Thanks folks, I'm very interested in hearing if you have thoughts, requests, or advice for the project.
https://redd.it/1ng4t9x
@r_opensource
Hi friends, I've got a lot of friends who run on Linux and Mac and are somewhat frustrated by the options that are out there, and even on Windows I was really looking for something a little more modern looking/feeling than LiveSplit to shake things up, so I decided to make one: https://github.com/ZellyDev-Games/OpenSplit
To be clear, this is not a usable product yet, it's pretty close to an alpha. This post is geared for developers who might be interested in helping, and people interested in testing in a few weeks.
Where I'm hoping to bring interest is
CSS styling with drop in skins (it's a Wails app, so the backend is Go, and the frontend is a React app, so web developers in particular will feel at home)
Cross platform, with working global hotkeys (Windows done, need someone good with mac/X APIs. I think Wayland is dead in the water, but knowledgeable folks would be great to talk to!)
Free, open source, permissive license. Do what you want with it.
Where the project is at
Very early development. To reiterate this post is geared towards developers who want to contribute or runners who might be interested in testing in a few weeks.
Basic UX/UI skeleton, you can open it, create split files, operate the timer, etc
Basic data models and file/IO to persist them
Pretty decent unit tests
What the project needs
Anyone interested who knows or wants to learn Go and React (with typenoscript)
MacOS developers. The hotkey system provided by Wails wasn't sufficient, so I made a platform specific system for Windows witht he Win32 API. This needs to be replicated on macOS and Linux
Linux developers. Largely for the same reason, specifically if you can think of a global hotkey solution for Wayland
Testers, but not quite yet. In a few weeks it could be ready to hand off for some VERY early alpha/dev preview testing.
Auto splitting. I don't even know where to start with this yet :D
How to get involved
Best place is the ZellyDev Games discord: discord gg slash xcrHKCsGmv select the "OpenSplit" option from the onboarding screen
Check out the README, CONTRIBUTING, and getting_started at the project's github: https://github.com/ZellyDev-Games/OpenSplit
Thanks folks, I'm very interested in hearing if you have thoughts, requests, or advice for the project.
https://redd.it/1ng4t9x
@r_opensource
GitHub
GitHub - ZellyDev-Games/OpenSplit: Free and Open Source Speedrun Split Timer with an emphasis on customization
Free and Open Source Speedrun Split Timer with an emphasis on customization - ZellyDev-Games/OpenSplit
How do I start contributing to open source projects on GitHub?
I already have an intermediate knowledge of C and C++, intermediate in C# too and I wanted to contribute to something, some issue or something like that, but I never did, does anyone have any tips?
https://redd.it/1ngd69x
@r_opensource
I already have an intermediate knowledge of C and C++, intermediate in C# too and I wanted to contribute to something, some issue or something like that, but I never did, does anyone have any tips?
https://redd.it/1ngd69x
@r_opensource
Reddit
From the opensource community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the opensource community
Quitter - Give up on addictions and become a Quitter
Hi! I'm the developer of Quitter, an app to track your journey towards giving up addictions.
We currently release to the Google Play store and support Windows/Linux in the releases section.
Our app is under active development so any suggestions/ideas are greatly welcomed.
https://redd.it/1ngefrl
@r_opensource
Hi! I'm the developer of Quitter, an app to track your journey towards giving up addictions.
We currently release to the Google Play store and support Windows/Linux in the releases section.
Our app is under active development so any suggestions/ideas are greatly welcomed.
https://redd.it/1ngefrl
@r_opensource
GitHub
GitHub - brandonp2412/Quitter: Give up on addictions and become a Quitter 😎
Give up on addictions and become a Quitter 😎. Contribute to brandonp2412/Quitter development by creating an account on GitHub.
Standalone index.html Files that Function as Network Peace Propagation via Narrative Reframing - Includes CORS bypass, etc
https://planetaryrestorationarchive.com/peace/auto
https://redd.it/1ngfggx
@r_opensource
https://planetaryrestorationarchive.com/peace/auto
https://redd.it/1ngfggx
@r_opensource
Planetaryrestorationarchive
Peace Lab — Automated Media Reframe + Regenerative Cookbook (Single File)
Automated engine that scans feeds, detects harmful framings, and generates regenerative rewrites + a living cookbook. Auto-runs while the tab stays open.
Sudoku v1.4.0 is here!
Hi everyone! We just released a new version of Sudoku, a modern take on the classic puzzle game. Improvements and bugfixes in this version include:
Sudoku is now mobile-friendly!
Notes can now be added by right-clicking your mouse on an empty cell.
Fixed a bug that allowed zero as a valid input and an icon bug.
Improved shortcuts
Install Sudoku from Flathub, and if you are interested in contributing to the project, please make sure to visit our GitHub page :).
https://redd.it/1ngkwc5
@r_opensource
Hi everyone! We just released a new version of Sudoku, a modern take on the classic puzzle game. Improvements and bugfixes in this version include:
Sudoku is now mobile-friendly!
Notes can now be added by right-clicking your mouse on an empty cell.
Fixed a bug that allowed zero as a valid input and an icon bug.
Improved shortcuts
Install Sudoku from Flathub, and if you are interested in contributing to the project, please make sure to visit our GitHub page :).
https://redd.it/1ngkwc5
@r_opensource
flathub.org
Install Sudoku on Linux | Flathub
Solve puzzles in style
Tip for an Open-Source Image Upscaling App
Hi,
I run a website that offers a free vector conversion tool. Since vector conversion works best with high-resolution images, I am looking for a free, open-source image upscaler.
I found this tool, which uses WebGPU and WASM in the browser: [https://github.com/lxfater/inpaint-web](https://github.com/lxfater/inpaint-web). Do you think it’s a good choice? The results are not bad, but maybe you know of a better open-source app.
My main concern is server resource usage (CPU and RAM). Ideally, the image upscaler should not put too much load on the server.
**My server specs:**
* 2× CPUs – 8 threads Xeon 1.70 GHz
* 8 GB RAM
* 40 GB storage
Currently, CPU usage is around 20%, and about 6 GB of RAM is still free.
https://redd.it/1ngnc9i
@r_opensource
Hi,
I run a website that offers a free vector conversion tool. Since vector conversion works best with high-resolution images, I am looking for a free, open-source image upscaler.
I found this tool, which uses WebGPU and WASM in the browser: [https://github.com/lxfater/inpaint-web](https://github.com/lxfater/inpaint-web). Do you think it’s a good choice? The results are not bad, but maybe you know of a better open-source app.
My main concern is server resource usage (CPU and RAM). Ideally, the image upscaler should not put too much load on the server.
**My server specs:**
* 2× CPUs – 8 threads Xeon 1.70 GHz
* 8 GB RAM
* 40 GB storage
Currently, CPU usage is around 20%, and about 6 GB of RAM is still free.
https://redd.it/1ngnc9i
@r_opensource
GitHub
GitHub - lxfater/inpaint-web: A free and open-source inpainting & image-upscaling tool powered by webgpu and wasm on the browser。|…
A free and open-source inpainting & image-upscaling tool powered by webgpu and wasm on the browser。| 基于 Webgpu 技术和 wasm 技术的免费开源 inpainting & image-upscaling 工具, 纯浏览器端实现。 - lxfater...
Free & open-source background removal tool (works locally, no upload needed)
https://github.com/withoutbg/withoutbg
https://redd.it/1ngq1lr
@r_opensource
https://github.com/withoutbg/withoutbg
https://redd.it/1ngq1lr
@r_opensource
GitHub
GitHub - withoutbg/withoutbg: Image Background Removal Toolkit - Open Source and API Models
Image Background Removal Toolkit - Open Source and API Models - withoutbg/withoutbg
Alternative Android OS for Niche Phone
I'm looking for a way to completely degoogle my android-phone. Problem, my phone is quite a niche one (Moondrop Miad01) so it basically appears on no compatibility list whatsoever. Any idea which android os would work for it?
Or in general, is there a chance that LineageOS could run even though my phone isn't listed as supported device?
https://redd.it/1ngqyzm
@r_opensource
I'm looking for a way to completely degoogle my android-phone. Problem, my phone is quite a niche one (Moondrop Miad01) so it basically appears on no compatibility list whatsoever. Any idea which android os would work for it?
Or in general, is there a chance that LineageOS could run even though my phone isn't listed as supported device?
https://redd.it/1ngqyzm
@r_opensource
Reddit
From the opensource community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the opensource community
Where to host open source utility: does it matter?
I'm working on a small open-source text utility that's privacy-focused (runs entirely locally without any servers). I still want to provide a hosted static site for people to use the utility without having to download and run it themselves. For the open source community, does the hosting platform matter - specifically GitHub Pages (with custom domain) versus Netlify? Do contributors and users have a preference?
My main consideration is whether GitHub Pages offers better transparency and verifiability—making it clearer that the deployed site matches the repository code. The primary advantage of Netlify would be access to basic, anonymous traffic metrics (like daily page view counts). But not sure if it matters?
https://redd.it/1ngu306
@r_opensource
I'm working on a small open-source text utility that's privacy-focused (runs entirely locally without any servers). I still want to provide a hosted static site for people to use the utility without having to download and run it themselves. For the open source community, does the hosting platform matter - specifically GitHub Pages (with custom domain) versus Netlify? Do contributors and users have a preference?
My main consideration is whether GitHub Pages offers better transparency and verifiability—making it clearer that the deployed site matches the repository code. The primary advantage of Netlify would be access to basic, anonymous traffic metrics (like daily page view counts). But not sure if it matters?
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