Hey everyone, I'm going insane due to a lack of creative project. I've written an app already but I haven't gotten around to publishing it yet. I'd like to know what kind of apps you'd like to see created for mobile Linux. I prefer easier, bite-sized projects over particularly large ones, but I'd love to hear your ideas nevertheless.
Damn. I know this life. I don't wish it on anyone, except those who exposed me to it...
Really cool stuff! I knew the Library of Congress is competing to be the largest library in the world, but I never would have guessed that they had programs that encourage reuse like this!
The Internet's Own Boy depicts the life of American computer programmer, writer, political organizer and Internet activist Aaron Swartz. It features interviews...
Hey, sorry for the late reply.
I've put this in the sidebar as a definition:
"The Libre Culture movement, also called the Free Culture movement, is a social movement constructed around the free exchange of ideas."
The movement is more nuanced than this, but I believe that this definition does a great job of summarizing the main, common goal that we share. What do you think?
Thank you very much! I hope I can make it work how I envision it.
I definitely agree with that. I wish people recognized the movement in general.
For me, I really want to see a time-sink game be made for mobile Linux phones. I'm working on something like one, but I'm not confident in my approach.
How about you guys? What do you want to see made?
As the title asks. I'd like to make this place the go-to libre culture forum, since so many others are dead.
A definition of libre culture, surely. I was thinking of keeping the rules sparse and broad, the usual "don't be rude" rules, but I was also thinking of adding a list of the kind of posts that are allowed here, such as memes and support requests, to help stimulate activity. If those kinds of posts aren't desired, I can make dedicated communities for those kinds of posts anyways.
What do you guys think?
More than once a week is pretty frequent, remember to give time to yourself. As for the sidebar, I haven't decided what I want to put there yet, but I think I've got an idea.
A set of rules, but also a set of posts that are allowed. I think I'd like to make a post asking what people want to see in the sidebar.
Ooh, there's also Shattered Pixel Dungeon, which I believe is a spin-off of the original. I could write a review, but I tried writing game reviews once before, and faced criticism for how poorly I had done it. Maybe I could consider trying again.
Whoa, this was far more thorough than I expected! It was long, but it wasn't boring. It was just the right length in my opinion. As for the game, I'll definitely try it out, I honestly had no idea it existed!
Check out Freeciv by the way, a libre civilization clone. It's my personal favourite. As for games that aren't clones, there's an Android game called Doors of Doom. I've been thinking about making a game inspired from it for Linux, both mobile and desktop, but I'm not sure how I feel about it yet.
I'd love to see your reviews!
Hey everyone, I've decided to create this subforum as an attempt to strengthen discussion around libre culture on Lemmy. Most libre culture subforums are fairly dead, with few having more than one post in just the last year.
I'm going to do what I can to make this place as active as possible.
Let's get the ball rolling! Post your memes, favourite apps, libre software support questions, libre software you wish existed, and everything else related to libre culture!
Hey everyone,
I recently wrote a mobile-friendly GNU/Linux app called Weights and Measures. It takes a number, and converts it into different units of measurement. I know, it's not the most advanced thing in the world, but I believe it's handy enough that more people than myself could use such an app. Personally, I use it to convert my weight from lbs to kilograms.
The thing is, I know that I should publish it, but I feel very demotivated from doing so. Publishing requires effort, so it typically requires a specific motivator. For myself, I used to have much a much stronger stance when it came to free/libre software.
Lately however, I feel very disconnected from any sense of community. I don't really feel like we are much of a community in the first place. I don't know a single person in my real life who cares about libre software outside of myself, and online, I feel somewhat jaded, as those who care about libre software seem to be more about worshipping the fungus of Richard Stallman's feet than they are about the actual libre culture movement.
As such, I can't decide whether I should keep working on it, or just keep it to myself.
TL;DR: Lonely software developer feels jaded from the libre software community and probably needs to find a way to connect with like-minded folks online.
I don't disagree. The pulse oximeter support is not very high on my priority list to be honest.
Oh, no haha. That would be pretty neat though.
I think you'll come to understand and appreciate it once I implement it. The crux of the app is that it mostly is responsible for tracking data over multiple sleeps, both subjective and objective. As a mere data tracker and interpreter, it doesn't "beat" a wristband monitor, it actually complements them, because they can be paired together, but this is a feature that wont be added until later on.
Depending on the wristband, in my experience, the data isn't always reliable. The Pinetime is much better than it used to be. Some wristbands track more than just pulse even, also tracking oxygen saturation, which is very handy.
Step one is just tracking useful user-provided data points. Step two is respiration tracking via the mic, by far the most useful feature in my opinion. While it's only one metric, and it can be messed with, and the quality isn't always perfect, the amount of inferred data is huge. Step three will be getting the accelerometer going, which I don't think is too useful for me, but it's a highly requested feature. The trick isn't to strap it to yourself, but to let it rest on your bed with you. The phone moves when you do. You may also put it in your pocket, but I don't think I'd recommend that because you'll definitely want to keep it connected to a charger. The (sum of the absolute value of the) little jiggles it'll detect can always be scaled up and down, or weighted differently on a per-user basis. Step four, getting paired hardware online. Step five, (with extra funding), might involve actually researching the hardware and techniques used in sleep analysis, building a type whatever-I-can-afford DIY kit, and optimizing how well the app works overall when working with clinical data/hardware.
One last thing, if you don't already own a smartwatch and cannot afford one but want to track sleep data, but you do own a mobile Linux phone, then it makes far more sense to either track your metrics yourself via pencil and paper, or plug some data into a tracking app.
It's good to have options. This app isn't about perfect, it's about good enough. I will admit that I do wish that I had spent a few more days researching this project prior to launching it, but I nevertheless feel reluctant to file this one as a mistake. Soon, I will have obligations to hold up, and I plan on doing my best. I feel that I can serve a community of users who may be suffering from a range of sleep disorders or perhaps mental or physical illnesses, who may benefit from multi-night polysomnography, but cannot afford to acquire such hardware, or even more unobtainable, the expertise of a technician. I'm someone who already does fall into this category. As such, I want to do as much as possible, with as little as possible.
Breath tracking (respiration) via amplification, noise filtering and then multi-band-pass filtering incoming audio data from the microphone is a huge trove of data already. The hard part of that will be listening for changes in the volume of breathing, which is very significant data.
Maybe one day, I will create a DIY free software type whatever polysomnograph, but that's likely going to cost people a lot of money to make themselves.
The primary benefit of a real sleep study is that a technician interprets your data. In both this case and the fictional DIY kit, the data is interpreted for you automatically via software. The primary drawback is accessibility, cost, and the requirement of a technician.
EEG is reserved for type 1 tests, which are the absolute best, but don't really make practical sense to me as a mobile phone app. Those who need a type 1 test may benefit from an actual DIY kit, but then this only makes sense if the user doesn't have public healthcare coverage, and the kit isn't likely to benefit the user past night one unless they're using it for therapy, and if they are, they're definitely going overkill.
Again, my focus is on utilizing existing hardware, and replacing the need for a tech. Give everyone a sub-par but universally accessible option, completely free.
I think I understand, I'm not aiming for perfect here. I will never expect to get the results as dead accurate as an actual clinical type 1 polysomnographic session. That being said, so much can be inferred with so little data to go off of.
Some sleep trials use portable machines nowadays that the user wears to bed at home. While they're equipped with objectively better sensors, it's hard to lose hope in my app. I know this has been done before, there are paid apps for polysomnography for Android. Typically they'll have oximeters at the worst and the same equipment as a type 1 at best. With our phones, the goal isn't so much to diagnose as it is to evaluate changes over time, and alert us if something seems likely.
I'll definitely think about bluetooth pulse oximeter support, but please keep in mind that I'm hacking away at it for less than minimum wage.
Never feel sorry for not donating. Take care of yourself first before taking care of others.
Thank you very much!
Thank you so much, you're too kind!!
Hey guys, I just wanted to let you know about a crowdfunding campaign I'm doing for a mobile Linux sleep tracking app. Please tell me what you think!
@MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz Honestly, that's a pretty sweet idea!
What you really mean is a fully free software e-book reader with copies of fantastic public domain works as provided by Project Gutenberg?? I sincerely agree!
Y'know, I'd sure be willing to reread The Great Gatsby!
This is the truest and most correct answer, but it comes with a huge drawback!
Awh, self esteem is important little man, don't beat yourself up!
All or nothing thinking, also known as “Black-and-White Thinking,” is a common cognitive distortion that manifests as an inability or unwillingness to see the shades of gray, or the more complex picture. In other words, you see things in terms of extremes – something is either fantastic or awful, you believe you are either perfect or a total failure.
You're twelve years old on Thanksgiving at six thirty in the morning. You'll be leaving for Grandma's in about a half hour, and she's lives a three hour drive away, going in one direction. You have nothing to prepare yourself on this journey, other than a tablet running Android Eleven. Beware, the speaker is broken and there is no headphone jack. Google Play complains that the device isn't certified or whatever, but that isn't going to stop you from downloading apps from third party websites using the family computer. Plus, you have one great advantage: F-droid is installed and ready to rock.
You must hurry, because you wont have an internet connection once you hit the road. Quick, what apps do you install? You have 128GiB's at your disposal.