Scuttlebutt: The Offline Social Feed Sailors Invented to Ditch Big Tech
Ever wonder how sailors stayed connected without spotty Wi-Fi? Scuttlebutt's delay-tolerant protocol did it — and now it's everyone's anti-Facebook dream.
Ever wonder how sailors stayed connected without spotty Wi-Fi? Scuttlebutt's delay-tolerant protocol did it — and now it's everyone's anti-Facebook dream.
Everyone pegged Puter as a cute browser toy. Now, with ONLYOFFICE baked in, it's gunning for your daily driver desktop—cloud or self-hosted.
Linux won't quit on the Dreamcast. Even in 2026, kernel hackers are patching in support for its GD-ROM format, breathing new life into 1999 hardware.
Imagine firing up a 1989 Intel i486 in 2025—Linux just said no. Kernel devs are purging decades-old baggage, freeing resources for tomorrow's silicon.
Imagine rebooting your Linux rig after a crash, only to find every window exactly where you left it. Wayland's xdg-session-management protocol just made that dream real — after a glacial six-year wait.
Dinosaurs are eating the internet, one rendered line at a time. This Chrome prank extension is engineering absurdity at its finest.
Retail traders chasing BTC gains while glued to charts? One dev's open-source bot experiment shows building your own algo is eye-opening—but no fast path to riches. Here's the data-driven breakdown.
Picture this: a Linux legend bows out after 12 years, AI promises to audit every shady binary, and Gentoo trolls with a Hurd switcheroo. FOSS Force's top five articles from the week ending April 3 pack more drama than a distro release cycle.
Last week's headlines exposed rampant supply chain attacks, AI unreliability, and hardware threats—predicting audits, NVIDIA fixes, and new AI playbooks ahead. Open source's underbelly demands action now.
Your Open Source morning briefing for April 04, 2026 — the top stories you need to know.
A developer built a multilingual financial calculator that works for both humans and machines. The secret? Treating AI crawlers like first-class users, not afterthoughts.
Someone just built a productivity timer that's actually a mirror held up to the economics of AI agents working on a budget. It's useless, it's meta, and it costs $0.05 per minute to run—which is exactly the point.