paequ2

joined 3 months ago
[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

FUTO specifically allows you to derive value from a project like this:

You may use or modify the software only for non-commercial purposes such as personal use for research, experiment, and testing for the benefit of public knowledge, personal study, private entertainment, hobby projects, amateur pursuits, or religious observance, all without any anticipated commercial application.

You may distribute the software or provide it to others only if you do so free of charge for non-commercial purposes.

Yes, it's a different set of value than Open Source™ gives you. Again, they're not claiming to provide the same value as Open Source™. (They're also not trying to replace Open Source™.) Yes, it's not the value that you want. Yes, that's by design.

Do you also think, what's the point of Google Search, Windows, WhatsApp, YouTube, Instagram, etc if you can't derive any "value" from it, where "value" means Open Source™ value? Those apps are still insanely valuable to users, even if they don't get Open Source™ value from them.

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Thanks for posting this! I use WhatsApp Web, so seems like this may cause me problems...

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 1 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Ooooh, wait. I think I understood one of your points better now...

I done (don't?) own the code I contribute. Technically meaning if you contribute code, and use that snippet in a commercial context, again, your in violation of the license.

So, I think you're saying, what if you contribute some code to a source available project, maybe some boilerplate that's the same everywhere, and then you use that same contribution in a commercial product? Then you'd be in violation of the source available license? Is that what you're saying?

This seems like a good reason NOT to contribute to a source available project, which is totally fine. Whereas this is possible with GPL if you 100% own the code and didn't sign a CLA.

However, not all projects are "I want everyone to pitch in and I want everyone to own the project." There are lots of projects where 1 dude or 1 company want to retain ownership of their app and don't need or want outside contributors. Normally, they'd probably just be closed source—maybe they might consider being source available.

(Just as long as they don't pretend to be Open Source™, in which case fuck them.)

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 1 points 2 days ago

Ah, shit. Aaaaaaaaand I'm off Nubo. They only accept bank wires as payment. My bank in the US doesn't allow international wires... so... i'm SOL.

OK, well. That concludes this experiment. Thanks for watching. Don't forget to like and subscribe. And I'll see you in the next one.

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 0 points 2 days ago (5 children)

And I love how you glossed over all of that to get a little bit hurt at me. ...

Sorry, the reason I glossed over that is because I didn't want to get involved in that conversation. I was just trying to get the conversation back on topic. I don't endorse the personal attacks.

So what if google also benefits?

Why are we ok with workers not getting paid for their labor? Would you still work at your job if they didn't pay you? These companies aren't small shops, they're huge giants that in some cases are destroying countries. They'll be ok if they have to share a tiny fraction of their obscene wealth with regular people.

TCP, SSL, and thousands of standard technology. Should those be charged as well?

That's a great question. I'm not really sure actually. Btw, I don't think Open Source™ should go away. I do think there could be a middle ground though. There should be more nuance than just 0% give away or 100% give away.

Even small utilities can contribute to people learning and adapting. ... It’s such a boogy man at the cost of other people learning and benefiting from what you’ve done the same way you benfit from others.

I think you may be confusing Source Available with Closed Source. Source Available licenses don't stop regular people from creating a community, contributing, learning, adapting, improving software. They do stop companies from making money off of your work though.

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 1 points 2 days ago

i will never understand what people hope to accomplish with these licenses

It's simple. The point is to stop Amazon, Google, etc from selling your product.

not backed by a trusted group, it’s basically entirely pointless.

FUTO has money to fight for the FUTO license. MariaDB, Hashicorp, Sentry etc have money to fight for the BUSL license.

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 2 points 2 days ago

Here's what I've found:

  • BUSL 1.1: a source available license that grants the right to copy, modify, create derivative works, redistribute, and make non-production use of the Licensed Work. If you release v1 of your app, 4 years later v1 becomes Open Source™. However, the latest version is still blocked from "production use". This actually seems pretty reasonable.
  • Post Open: a source available license (and whole organization) that's broken into 2 parts: zero-cost license for regular users and a paid contract for commercial use. It sounds like the Post Open Collective would go out and enforce and charge companies to use Post Open software and then pay devs. (Not ready yet!)

Hashicorp recently switch to BUSL 1.1 for Terraform (and other things), which a lot of people got pissed about... which I understand! They took all of the community's contributions and then changed the terms on them! I get that.

However, starting a project from scratch with BUSL 1.1 and then not claiming to be Open Source™ seems totally fine to me. Contributions from the public may come or may not. That's fine. A lot of projects don't have a rich community of people all over the world contributing. A lot of projects are just 1 dude or 1 company doing 95% of the dev work. That's fine. If you don't want to contribute to a project because it's source available instead of Open Source™ that's tooootally fine.

The regular user, however, would still mostly get the benefits of Open Source™. The people affected would be the ones trying to make money off of your app.

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 0 points 2 days ago (7 children)

People believing in community built and owned software

Btw, I'm not arguing against this. I believe Open Source™ is valuable and has its place. This post isn't about Open Source™, despite most people on this thread trying to label the FUTO license as Open Source™ and then getting mad because it's not actually Open Source™ even though FUTO isn't claiming to be Open Source™. This is something else.

The main thing I'm thinking about is how to prevent Google, Facebook, etc from extracting huge amounts of wealth from small devs who get nothing in return. The obvious answer has been to release an app as closed source. That blocks out Big Tech AND users. Source Available licenses might be a third option to block out Big Tech, but not regular users.

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 1 points 2 days ago

open source washing

I definitely agree with you on this IF the company is claiming to be Open Source™, but then uses a source available license.

However, FUTO is NOT claiming to be Open Source™.

I think about it this way: either a business releases the app as close source and users can't see anything OR the app is released as source available and users can see what's going on. Contributions are not expected and may not even be allowed. Open Source™ wouldn't even be considered as an option.

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 2 points 2 days ago

Not sure if you know, but 0C is so cold that water freezes. Whoa. 🤯

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 6 points 2 days ago (9 children)

Uh... 0C is also real cold. 100C is also real hot.

[–] paequ2@lemmy.today 27 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

I didn't even realize you could install OpenOffice anymore... it's doesn't seem available in the Arch repos. https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Apache_OpenOffice

Oh, wow. TIL https://www.openoffice.org/

 

Source First License 1.1: https://gitlab.futo.org/videostreaming/grayjay/-/blob/master/LICENSE.md

This is a non-open source license. They were claiming to be open source at one point, but they've listened to the community and stopped claiming they were open source. They are not trying to be Open Source™.

They call themselves "source first". https://sourcefirst.com/

They're trying to create a world where developers can make money from writing source first software, where the big tech oligarchy can't just suck them dry.

 

Those commitments and principles are under threat. Synadia, the original donor of the NATS project, has notified CNCF of its intention to “withdraw” the NATS project from the foundation and relicense the code under the Business Source License (BUSL)—a non-open source license that restricts user freedoms and undermines years of open development.

516
submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by paequ2@lemmy.today to c/technology@lemmy.world
 

Range

  • Small battery range: 240km
  • Big battery range: 385km

Motor

  • Motor: Single motor, rear wheel drive
  • Power: 150kW
  • Torque: 264Nm
  • 0-100km: 8s
  • Top speed: 145km/h

Dimensions

  • Bed length: 1.5m
  • Vehicle length: 4.4m
  • Vehicle height: 1.8m
  • Vehicle width: 1.8m

Comparison

  • 2025 Kia Niro length: 4.4m
  • 2025 Ford Maverick length: 5.1m
  • 1985 Toyota Pickup/Hilux length: 4.7m

Weights

  • Curb weight 1634kg
  • Max payload 650kg
  • Max towing 454kg

Charging

  • Port: NACS
  • Onboard charger: 11kW
  • Level 1 AC, 3.6kw, 20-100%: 11h
  • Level 2 AC, 11kW, 20-100%: under 5h
  • Level 3 DC, 120kW, 20-80%: under 30m

Safety

  • Traction Control
  • Electronic Stability Control
  • Forward Collision Warning
  • Automatic Emergency Braking
  • 2-stage Driver/Passenger Airbags
  • Full Length Side Curtain Airbags (Truck 2) (SUV 4)
  • Seat Side Airbags (2)
  • Backup Camera
  • Pedestrian Identification
  • Auto High Beam

More info

4
submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by paequ2@lemmy.today to c/flatpak@lemmy.ml
 

Currently, Actual Budget is not available via Flathub. They do offer a .flatpak file on the releases page, but it would be nicer if they were on Flathub.

Vote to get Actual Budget on Flathub! 🗳

 

Are home alarm systems worth it? I'm talking about something like ADT or Vivint, with window and door sensors, and automated police calls.

Are those monthly subscriptions worth it? Do you guys have them? Does anyone have any stories where having an alarm system made a break-in situation better? Are they just snake oil?

 

I found some thread on the Discord saying that you should

install using abroot should be the Best option

But then nobody posts how to do that...

Have any VanillaOS 2.0 Orchrid users here successfully installed Tailscale?

 

I'm trying it out for the first time and reading the handbook here: https://docs.vanillaos.org/handbook/en/updates

However, I noticed the page says:

This guide is for Kinetic (22.10), not Orchid.

And when I tried running command to check for updates, I got this.

$ vso update-check
Error: unknown command "update-check" for "vso"
Run 'vso --help' for usage.
  ERROR   unknown command "update-check" for "vso"

I could wait for the normal update job to run, but I'm being impatient. :)

view more: next ›