83 private links
A very nice GUI client for git. Nice design and pretty functional layout - somewhat reminiscent of GitKraken
PEASS - Privilege Escalation Awesome Scripts SUITE (with colors) - peass-ng/PEASS-ng
Run Windows apps such as Microsoft Office/Adobe in Linux (Ubuntu/Fedora) and GNOME/KDE as if they were a part of the native OS, including Nautilus integration.
Works for Office Apps and Adobe apps, and a few other microsoft-owned ones. Seems very interesting way to integrate with Linux system.
Do not know if it works outside the Gnome/KDE ecosystems.
A Windows driver implementation of btrfs, so you can use it from a windows system.
I believe it is still (highly?) experimental so do not use it for sensitive and important files, in fact best use it on a test system with disposables drives first.
But I have seen some people use it to have e.g. windows and steamos have access to the same btrfs drive for games so they don't have to duplicate the 100+GB game files for switching systems, quite clever.
Cyberduck is a libre FTP, SFTP, WebDAV, Amazon S3, Backblaze B2, Microsoft Azure & OneDrive and OpenStack Swift file transfer client for Mac and Windows.
GUI software to access any and all of the above (and more) protocols/services. Includes e.g. access to both Nextcloud and Dropbox storage and your S3 buckets on top.
Runs in its own GUI so too cumbersome for me, but also is the foundation for the paid 'Mountainduck' software (for Win and Mac) which incorporates everything into the explorer GUI and thus runs as invisibly as on Linux mounts. Pretty clever!
An open-source cross-platform alternative to AirDrop. Local file sharing easy through being on a single connection.
Simple: Create windows install media (on USB) from any image file. Nice!
Make Linux (made for debian/xubuntu) look exactly like Win95 - just in case you ever feel nostalgic for a weirdly homey desktop feel.
Electron but slimmer basically. Can theoretically be super multi-platform (including mobile soon-ish?).
Allows you to write JS/Typescript for frontend stuff for the desktop just like electron
May be the first dotfile manager to move me away from my beloved GNU stow setup -
- it does everything stow does (in fact, you can migrate without changing your repo),
- but it also does templating of files (amazing if some program has to change its config files every now and again)
- plus it allows different deployment targets with config-merging and multiple includes (e.g. you can have a modular graphics, wm and so on setup and enable/disable anything based on deploying to Win/Linux/Mac)
Seems powerful and since it is contained in a single rust binary we can also quickly bootstrap with a simple script in the beginning.
Remote desktop software that is open source. Really nice alternative to teamviewer, splashtop, remmina and other RDP implementations.
Setting up Windows 10 in KVM, using virt-manager. Goes through step-by-step for driver installation and so on, very helpful
Sioyek is a PDF viewer designed for reading research papers and technical books.
Has basic scroll, mark, highlight functionality but an interesting 'portal' one. You link one location in the document to another (opened in another window) and the extra window always displays the closest linked location as you read along. Seems useful for consulting e.g. figures or tables while also reading along the main text at the same time.
Can also be extended for OCR, text-to-speech, auto-download and translation which seems good.
Cross-platform
This guide describes performance optimizations for gaming on virtual machines with GPU passthrough. This includes host, guest, qemu and libvirt optimizations.
Really nice simple walkthrough for getting a Windows 10 guest running on a proxmox host in a virtual machine. Goes over simple settings (especially virtio) and driver installation.
Can be supplemented with proxmox wiki page: https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Windows_10_guest_best_practices
Which, especially, contains an up-to-date link to driver iso.
Amazing cross-platform filesharing app (for sharing over wifi/LAN).
Super simple to setup, there's applications on anything from linux/windows/mac to android and ios and it's made by the linuxmint team so it's all nicely open source and free and wonderful!
Another fast terminal, written in rust. A lot reminds me of alacritty (though this comes with more extensive features like tabs and multiplexing on its own).
I guess, it reminds me of a terminal looking like alacritty with a feature-set more akin to kitty (which sounds like a good thing!)
Lastly, the terminal implements both sixel and kitty image protocol support so that's nice. Should try it one of these days!
A step-by-step explanation of growing/shrinking NTFS partitions in Linux
Web tool to generate scripts for enforcing privacy & security best-practices such as stopping data collection of Windows and different softwares on it.
Can create a script between lax and functionally identical to normal windows running and strict and no bloat at all versions.