248 points

Gonna go with Firefox as both my most-used piece of open-source software, and the software I see as most important to its ecosystem. If Firefox fails then we’ve just got Chromium-based browsers and, I guess, Safari.

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2 points

This a million times over!

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147 points

I love and use Bitwarden daily.

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14 points

There something I don’t understand. How does one use Bitwarden daily? It generates, remembers and autofill passwords, right? I rarely enter a password anywhere. What am I missing? Please educate me.

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54 points

There are certain sites which terminate your sessions after a while. For example, banking sites or most government portals. In such situations, the auto fill function is very handy.

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17 points

Also the fact that if you use a shared machine at all to login, it’s best practice to intentionally log out of everything, and clear cookies/cache when you’re done.

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1 point

It also allows you to use long, complex, safe passwords, use different ones on every site, and not have to remember them.

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10 points

Like the other commenter said, I use it for sites that tend to sign me out after a few hours. I also use it for work things that sign out every session.

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7 points
*
Deleted by creator
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4 points

I auto wipe cookies all on every browser close so that gets more use.

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1 point

Way way late to this, but I’ll also say: Firefox and other privacy-focused browsers have an option to delete all of your browsing history and cookies when you close the browser, which also logs you out of anything you were using. It’s a good practice if you’re being mindful of how much tracking data you are letting be collected from you.

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I knew about Bitwarden, but I thought how could a cloud based thing be truly open source, but they actually do have their backend on GitHub 🤯

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1 point

I also love bitwarden daily ;)

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1 point

I also love bitwarden daily ;)

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138 points

Firefox and its derivatives. They’re the last free bastion preventing a Chromium monopoly on the browser market, which is hugely important - especially these days with Google’s push for Mv3.

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99 points

Signal, Thunderbird and Bitwarden

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10 points

Signal, Firefox and Eclipse.

Too bad Signal are dropping support for Windows 7 ;(

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52 points
*

Kind of odd to use Signal (a privacy and security focused messenger) on Windows 7 (an EOL and thus highly unsecure operating system).

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7 points

it is a development machine with highly specialised tools - Altium Designer, SolidWorks, IDA Pro, Altera Quartus, etc.

Upgrading the OS is not a trivial thing as would be on a phone or tablet. Also when upgrading the OS it would make sense to upgrade the HW as well, and that is a major investment. And Signal is just not important really to warrant that.

I would still use it on my phone though, but on the PC is just Viber unfortunately (whatsapp dropped as well).

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2 points

I didn’t know thunderbird was open source!

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3 points

Yup, it’s the nephew, so to speak, of Firefox!

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1 point

that’s cool that others also love open source. these three right here are 🔥

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95 points

Ill throw in some obscure ones I use daily.

  • StemRoller. It’s an AI-powered toolthat takes an mp3 and separates each instrument into its own file. Im a musician, and having access to stems like this is a game changer.

  • Carla is a tool for hosting VST plugins without the need for a full DAW. I primarily use Amp Simulators, and this has become a mandatory tool on any computer I use. It’s also maintained by the creator of KXStudio.

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14 points

omg, stemroller sounds amazing!

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6 points

Stemroller sounds insane.

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2 points

Just downloaded and tried StemRoller. Definitely impressed, I’d say it works marginally better than any of the “free” (aka trial version, need to pay for full features) stem separators I’ve tried online, so very happy to find this!

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1 point

How does StemRoller compare to Serato?

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3 points

I haven’t tried it so I can’t speak to the features/results you get, but I do know Serato is closed-source. I always go with FOSS if I can.

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2 points

Same here, I’ll give it a shot once I can.

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1 point

Those I’ll need to check especially the vst host. Nice :)

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1 point

Both of these sound interesting, though I can’t really think of a use for running vsts without a DAW. For a moment I thought it would be nice to play synth without opening a daw, but if I decide to record something I played I have to set it all up again.

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3 points
*

I use Ampsims nearly exclusively. When I’m practising or just noodling I don’t have any intention to record. Carla has a much smaller footprint than a standard DAW, and therefore less energy usage.

Keep in mind I’m a string instrument player primarily. I don’t play with synths or anything like that.

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1 point

These two links might single handedly change my life. Many thanks!!

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