Back in 2016, we carried a feature looking at 5 music software that were highly promising. How did this merry band of open source software fare?
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The Linux Portal Site
Back in 2016, we carried a feature looking at 5 music software that were highly promising. How did this merry band of open source software fare?
Read moreNow and Then is a series of articles that looks at how Linux software has fared over the years. This article picks up on 7 web browsers.
Read moreTerminal Image Viewer is a small program to display images in a (modern) terminal using RGB ANSI codes and unicode block graphics characters. It’s free and open source software.
Read moreMark Text is billed as a simple and elegant open-source markdown editor that focuses on speed and usability.
Read moreThis is a new feature that looks at the progress made by open source software which appeared highly promising. Have they reached production quality, are they best-of-breed in their field, or only remembered like fingerprints on an abandoned handrail? We look at 3 terminal emulators.
Read moreCryptonose is a small open source utility that might be helpful if you’re interested in trading cryptocurrency. The tool supports 3 exchanges: Binance, Bitfinex and Poloniex.
Read moreLinux Candy is a series of articles covering interesting eye candy software. We only feature open source software in this series.
Read moreeDEX-UI is a fullscreen, cross-platform terminal emulator and system monitor that looks and feels like a sci-fi computer interface.
Read moreA common misconception about contributing to open source is that you need to write code. In fact, it’s often the other parts of a project that are in urgent need of assistance.
Read moreUnison is a file-synchronization tool that allows two replicas of a collection of files and directories to be stored on different hosts (or different disks on the same host), modified separately, and then brought up to date by propagating the changes in each replica to the other.
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