• Appukuttan
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    872 years ago

    Whatsapp. Everyone in India uses it. Its like the imessage situation in the US. So widespread.

    Schools, college, friend groups, family groups all are on whatsapp.

    • kristina [she/her]
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      2 years ago

      there’s a kerala lemmy? thats neat FrogPog

      telegram is used a lot in slav countries, i feel like its pretty decent

    • Magnor
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      12 years ago

      Same in France. Even (this is insane) for work coordination…

    • PeripateticFella
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      312 years ago

      Can second this for Germany, too.

      I tried to degoogle and to only use FOSS apps and services, but ditching WhatsApp would throw me in a black hole.

      • @itsmect@monero.town
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        22 years ago

        Same here. I wonder if there is an easy way to leave an old phone with whatsapp at home and forward the messages to my daily driver. Would prevent the zuck from reading out my contact list at minimum. I know he still has everybody else’s but still.

      • @cwagner@lemmy.cwagner.me
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        72 years ago

        Half-and-half here (also Germany). Almost everyone I know uses Signal & WhatsApp both. But WA is for bad connectivity and group chats, plus a few (mostly foreigners) holdouts.

        • PeripateticFella
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          102 years ago

          I have ONE contact who uses Signal. Yes, it’s a shame but at this point I think that I could convert more people to using Linux than to switching to Signal.

          • @cwagner@lemmy.cwagner.me
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            2 years ago

            I hear that a lot, it’s so weird, even my mum, dad and aunts (all around 70 years old) use Signal, and that was not my idea (I used to avoid all those fucking phone-number messengers for a few years until I caved in and realized Jabber is not making a return to mainstream …)

      • Appukuttan
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        182 years ago

        How am I supposed to message people when the only messaging app they use is whatsapp and facebook messenger (which I don’t use)?

        I guess the only easy alternative is to use SMS and email since everyone use it. But it is not safe.

        I am always open to alternatives like Signal, Element,etc. But no one use them. I am not going to force people to use a messaging app.

        • Domi
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          22 years ago

          As a workaround, you can bridge most services to Matrix. I currently bridge Telegram, Signal and SMS to my Matrix server and only need Element on my phone and desktop.

          Unfortunately Element is fairly focused on business users, would be cool if they could host bridges for individuals to make the barrier of entry easier.

  • Rin
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    2 years ago

    Clip Studio Paint. Preferred it overall compared to the free open source art programs I’ve tried, and there’s a wide variety of user made brushes. Although I do hate how they changed their licensing in 2.0.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce
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    272 years ago

    Steam and Discord, but mainly Steam.

    If you told me I had to go 100% FOSS tomorrow, I could do it pretty easily, except for those two apps.

    95% of my games are through Steam, and 95% of all my friends, family, and online community are in Discord. I could probably even dump Discord and convince some of my closest friends and FAM to switch to a Matrix client or something. But giving up Steam would mean I would basically be giving up nearly all gaming in my life.

    And contrary to many other FOSS enthusiasts, I actually think Steam and Discord are great apps. I’ve rarely had issues with them, especially Steam. The UI is decent, the features are great, (Steam game join, Workshop mods, etc.) And Discord works really well on Linux for me, and GrapheneOS on my phone.

    Of those two, I’d rather dump Discord. Valve is generally a very FOSS friendly company and pretty consumer friendly compared to most multi-billion dollar corpos. And what they’ve done recently for Linux gaming over the last few years with Proton, the Steam Deck, etc has has made gaming on Linux a wonderful experience for me.

    Recently I have been trying to get into more FOSS games and GoG DRM-free games as an insurance policy for what I know is coming down the line one day. Gabe will either retire, pass away, or be bought out by a corpo/capital investment firm and Valve will become victim to the enshitification effect like all other proprietary software.

    There is a small hope I have, idk if this is even possible, but what if Gabe chooses to open source some or all of the Steam code instead of letting it get bought out or taken over by somebody else? That would allow for the FOSS community to fork it and build a FOSS Steam.

    Like I said though, a pipe dream for now. Long live FOSS!

  • @cujo@sh.itjust.works
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    122 years ago

    Jetbrains IntelliJ is a big contender, but I get along just fine in other, FOSS IDEs. I prefer GIMP to Photoshop, actually, but that may just be a case where I learned photo manipulation on GIMP and didn’t touch Photoshop until far later.

    My final answer has to be in image processing/photo editing software. CaptureOne Pro is leagues ahead of anything FOSS I’ve ever tried. DarkTable, RawTherapee, ART, none of it can come close to comparing right now. No matter how much time I give it, I just… Can never make the transition. Which sucks, because CaptureOne is not available on Linux and it’s pretty well impossible to get it running. 🥲

  • Bobby_DROP_TABLES [he/him]
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    62 years ago

    Nvidia GPU drivers, Noveau is generally fine but for some reason it bricks Deep Rock Galactic which is enough to make me switch.

  • @AdmiralShat@programming.dev
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    382 years ago

    Affinity is the best non Adobe image editing suite. The Foss stuff just doesn’t compare, imo. Even if feature parity, the UI of Foss image editing softwares is hotshit.

    FL studio is beating out LMMS. However, I pirate FL, so it’s still free to me.

  • @myersguy@lemmy.simpl.website
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    2 years ago

    The Jetbrains suite of IDE’s. Particularly Jetbrains Rider. The platform ~~they are all ~~ many of them are built on is open source though, and you can get free licenses for all of their products if you are using them to develop open source software!

    • @AdmiralShat@programming.dev
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      52 years ago

      It’s fucking open source??? Does that me we can build from source to have it for free?

      I have the last version you can use free forever (and I’m the reason they fixed it, by the way)

      • @myersguy@lemmy.simpl.website
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        112 years ago

        The underlying intelliJ platform is, not the entire IDE. I did edit the post though, as I realized not all of them are built on that platform.

        If you are working on open source, you can still grab free licenses. You just have to renew them each year (completely free, just requires proof of FOSS contribution)

    • @nikt@lemmy.ca
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      132 years ago

      DataGrip is the one JetBrains IDE I can’t work without and continue to pay for. I’d love to find a pure OSS alternative, but there’s nothing else like it.

      • @cwagner@lemmy.cwagner.me
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        492 years ago

        Not OP, but everything? It’s a far more complete solution with far more capabilities. It can be compared to full VS, not Code, IMO.

        • Pixel
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          22 years ago

          are there any good open source alternatives for VSCode for people that don’t want to learn emacs/vim? I’ve been looking for a good code editor to replace it but I haven’t been impressed elsewhere

          • @benzmacx16v@discuss.tchncs.de
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            122 years ago

            VSCode is open (MIT) but it is packaged by MS to include some tracking/telemetry and they are distributed under a non-free license.

            You can use VSCodium for a telemetry free and MIT licensed binary or you are free to build the source where the default config is no telemetry and MIT license.

          • steve
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            32 years ago

            There is always Eclipse IDE. It’s not as polished as Jetbrain’s apps for sure but it’s still very capable. It’s published under the Eclipse Public License. I think the language server code that’s used in VSCode is from Eclipse, it can be used for developing many languages and there are lots of plugins and other add-ons to enhance the experience.

        • silly goose meekah
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          2 years ago

          But to be fair, the plugin capabilities for VS code are incredible. Of course its a lot more work but you can pretty much replicate the VS experience

        • bugsmith
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          112 years ago

          That’s a bit of a silly statement. Once you’ve installed a few extensions for your language (a language server and linting at minimum), it is effectively an IDE with a reasonably powerful debugger included. Just because it’s modular and not “batteries included” doesn’t make it incomparable.

          • snowe
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            32 years ago

            Microsoft straight up says it’s not an IDE.

            • bugsmith
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              2 years ago

              Sure. But I didn’t say it was either. I only pointed out that it’s silly to say “there’s no comparison”, when most functionality is easily achievable on both. And depending on language, it’s not even difficult.

              Edit: In fairness, I did say “it’s effectively an IDE”, but I stand by the point that after a few extensions - what is the difference? If I can debug, refactor, and and get complete intellisense (including finding declarations etc), I’m doing more or less everything I would in a dedicated IDE.

              Edit 2: I feel I’ve gone to far the other way. I have used am am aware of some of the capabilities that a fill fledged IDE has over something like VSCode. Especially for languages like those of the C-family. But I do take issue with implying they’re not comparable. For many usecases and languages, they’re totally comparable.

              • snowe
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                32 years ago

                I guess it depends on your goals. I install Intellij, or WebStorm, or PyCharm, or RubyMine, and I get a working environment right out of the box. I don’t have to figure out what functionality is missing, then go search for the most maintained and up to date plugin, hoping that it has all the features I need. It just works. I use VS Code a lot, every day, but it’s sorely lacking, even with all of the plugins it has, in basic stuff like refactoring an entire codebase, or just regular old code cleanup. I’ll give a few examples, they might have equivalents in the vs code ecosystem, but I have not been able to find them.

                1. Inspect Code

                In JB products I can choose Code > Inspect Code, from the menu bar, and have it show everything wrong with the project, including code that is never hit, code that is duplicated, Control Flow issues, Data Flow issues, typos, probable bugs, Security issues (including in your dependencies), migration aids, the list goes on and on and on. And it doesn’t just do it for one language in your repo, it does it for every file type. So you don’t have to install a plugin that finds security issues in your poms, and then one that finds them in package.json, and then another for your gemfile, etc.

                1. Structural Search and Replace

                This one is quite hard to describe, so I’ll let the intellij docs explain it for me. https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/structural-search-and-replace.html

                A conventional search process does not take into account the syntax and semantics of the source code. Even if you use regular expressions, IntelliJ IDEA still treats your code as a regular text. The structural search and replace (SSR) actions let you search for a particular code pattern or grammatical construct in your code considering your code structure.

                IntelliJ IDEA finds and replaces fragments of source code, based on the search templates that you create and conditions you apply.

                There are a ton of things that I can’t find equivalents for in VS Code, but these are two major ones.

                • bugsmith
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                  22 years ago

                  It’s that’s fine that you’ve got some examples of features that are more powerful in JB products. It would be a great shame if such a heavy and reasonably expensive program didn’t.

                  But I’m not arguing that VS Code is better or worse. I’m arguing that it is comparable (on the sense that it is worth of comparison). Which it is.

                  I agree that JB’s search is fantastic. Unmatched perhaps. All of that indexing it does when you open a project really pays off.

                  But you can get a lot of JB’s functionality in VS Code. You can get a very good code inspection in several languages, Python being the premier example. You can also get excellent docker integration, excellent linting, a reasonable search and replace across all files, and a top notch debugging experience for some languages (Python being the premier example again).

                  Sure JB products do some of that stuff better (at the cost of being heavier programs with significant start up time).

                  I use both. I like both. I believe VS Code is very formidable and could be the sole editor a developer uses flr many types of projects (Web Development, Python projects, many Go projects too all come to mind).

            • bugsmith
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              2 years ago

              Yes, I’ve made heavy use of PyCharm, IntelliJ and Datagrip and I’m a huge fan of them all.

  • Freeman
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    22 years ago

    Quicken,

    I really wish there was a FOSS alternative that supported the autodownload of transactions across my plethora of banks/accounts (some I even chose specifically for better integration) but its sooo incestuous that theres really not much and what alternatives are available are usually cloud based where you cant guarantee the security of all your financial data.

  • @CafecitoHippo@lemm.ee
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    352 years ago

    Excel. There’s just basic stuff with LibreOffice and OnlyOffice that work like crap. Like why in LibreOffice when I type =sum then hit tab does it think I’m done with the formula instead of adding the ( and letting me put in the first input. It’s awful.

  • @milkisklim@lemm.ee
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    82 years ago

    As much as I love to hate ESRI, Arcpy just works and has solid documentation. Sure I could use a strictly geopandas solution but when the customer wants to have the product in a file geodatabase, noting beats the built in export method.

    I guess I am stuck in error 999999 land for life.

  • Frater Mus
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    2 years ago
    • WinSCP, for the transfer-then-delete function. It’s the only thing I run under WINE. also open source
    • Calibre, for doing everything I need with ebooks edit: Calibre still does everything I need but is open source

    Edit: thank you to everyone who pointed out my incorrect info

  • Sir_Kevin
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    142 years ago

    As much as I dislike Adobe, Photoshop is something I can’t get away from.