I just found a new tool to analyze my network connections called "stitch"

https://github.com/karol-broda/snitch

There is a AUR package on Arch, give it a try.

#Arch #Linux #AUR #LinuxTools

GitHub - karol-broda/snitch: a prettier way to inspect network connections

a prettier way to inspect network connections. Contribute to karol-broda/snitch development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub

Open Notebook è la nuova alternativa open source e privacy‑first a Google Notebook LM. Supporta oltre 16 provider AI, funziona al 100% in locale e organizza contenuti multimodali #OpenSource #AI #LinuxTools #Docker

https://www.linuxeasy.org/open-notebook-lalternativa-open-e-privacy-first-a-google-notebook-lm/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social

Open Notebook l’alternativa open e privacy‑first a Google Notebook LM

Open Notebook è la nuova alternativa open source e privacy‑first a Google Notebook LM. Supporta oltre 16 provider AI, funziona al 100% in locale e organizza contenuti multimodali

Linux Easy - News da Mondo Linux
FOSS Advent Calendar - Door 13: Screen-Mirroring & Recording with scrcpy

Today’s tool is scrcpy, a powerful open-source utility that lets you mirror and control your Android device from your PC via ADB (Android Debug Bridge) over USB or Wi‑Fi.

With scrcpy, you can see your phone screen on your desktop and control it directly from your PC using your mouse and keyboard. You can also record screencasts from the mirrored session, perfect for tutorials, capturing gameplay, or streaming mobile apps, all without installing anything on your phone.

CLI-friendly and lightweight, scrcpy gives you full PC-based control over your device: navigate, type, launch apps, or record everything from your desktop. No bloated software, no intrusive permissions.

Link: https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy

As a developer, which part of your workflow would scrcpy improve the most? Testing, debugging, or presenting your app?

#ScreenMirror #AndroidToPC #DevProductivity #TechTools #FreeSoftware #AndroidDev #DeveloperTools #USBdebugging #TechHacks #ProductivityTools #CommandLine #TechTips #DIYTech #DigitalNomad #Workflow #TechCommunity #LinuxTools #CrossPlatform #adventkalender #adventskalender #AndroidScreen #MirroringTool #OpenSourceTools #TechFreedom #NoRoot #FOSSLove #FOSSAdvent #android #linux
FOSS Advent Calendar - Door 3: Exploring Gemini with Amfora

Gemini is a lightweight, privacy-friendly alternative to the web! A place where content is simple, text-focused, and completely tracker-free.
It uses its own protocol (gemini://) and a minimalist page format called GMI, which is very close to Markdown: just headings, links, lists, and plain text. No JavaScript, no cookies, no ads... just clean information.

To browse Gemini, you need a Gemini client.
One of the most popular terminal clients is Amfora. It brings the whole Geminispace into your terminal with a clean UI, keyboard navigation, and zero distractions. Perfect for reading blogs, tech posts, small communities, and even news (yes, the German newspaper taz has a Gemini capsule!).

Gemini is the perfect reminder that the internet can be simple, fast, and human-sized again.

Link: https://github.com/makew0rld/amfora

Do you still browse Gemini? Which capsules do you like?

#FOSS #OpenSource #Gemini #GeminiSpace #Amfora #CLI #Terminal #Linux #GeminiProtocol #Markdown #Datenschutz #FreieSoftware #GeminispaceDE #MinimalWeb #TechNerds #Dezentral #Fediverse #CommandLine #Privacy #Unix #FOSSAdvent #LinuxTools #FOSSAdventCalendar #adventcalendar
FOSS Advent Calendar - Door 2: newsboat

Stay up-to-date with your favorite websites and RSS feeds without leaving the terminal! newsboat is a fast, flexible RSS/Atom feed reader for the command line. Perfect for nerds who love minimalism and efficiency.

Scroll through the latest updates and mark them as read, no GUI needed.

Link: https://github.com/newsboat/newsboat

#FOSS #OpenSource #FreeSoftware #Linux #CLI #Terminal #LinuxTools #FOSSAdvent #FOSSAdventCalendar #Coding #Programming #Tech #Nerd #AI #MachineLearning #DeepLearning #DevLife #Geek #Productivity #StudyTools
FOSS Advent Calendar - Door 1: pdfgrep
Search PDFs like a pro! Tired of manually opening PDFs to find a specific term? pdfgrep lets you search text inside PDF files directly from the terminal! Super handy for research papers, lecture notes, or any PDF-heavy workflow

You’ll instantly see all matches and the file name... no more endless scrolling!

Link: https://gitlab.com/pdfgrep/pdfgrep

#FOSS #OpenSource #FreeSoftware #Linux #CLI #Terminal #LinuxTools #FOSSAdvent #FOSSAdventCalendar #Coding #Programming #Tech #Nerd #AI #MachineLearning #DeepLearning #DevLife #Geek #Productivity #StudyTools

🗣️🎤📝  Speech to Text and Text to Speech on GNU/Linux  📝🔊💻

Why This Matters to Me (and Maybe You Too)

If you’re anything like me—a Linux user who counts on voice typing and TTS because of visual impairment—you know that accessibility is not a luxury, it’s a necessity. Speaking from experience as someone who depends on voice typing (and TTS) , the quest for a seamless, local, FLOSS speech-to-text (STT) setup on Linux can be frustrating.
Here’s how you can succeed with modern tools using Linux. FLOSS means freedom and privacy; working locally means real control.
Let’s dive in! I’ll tell you what I’ve learned and what I use—and hope you’ll share your favorite tools or tips!

System-Wide Voice Keyboard: Speak Directly in Any App

Want to speak and have your words typed wherever your cursor is—be it a terminal, browser, chat, or IDE? Here’s what actually works and how it feels day-to-day:

- Speak to AI (Offline, Whisper-based, global hotkeys)
This tool is my current go-to. It uses Whisper locally, lets you use global hotkeys (configurable) to type into any focused window, and doesn’t need internet. Runs smoothly on X11 and Wayland; just takes a bit of setup (AppImage available!).
GitHub Repo https://github.com/AshBuk/speak-to-ai) | Dev.to Post https://dev.to/ashbuk/i-built-an-offline-voice-typing-app-for-linux-speak-to-ai-3ab5)

- DIY: RealtimeSTT + PyAutoGUI
For the true tinkerers, RealtimeSTT plus a Python script lets you simulate keystrokes. You control every step, can lower latency with your tweaks, but you’ll need to be comfortable with scripting.
RealtimeSTT Guide https://github.com/KoljaB/RealtimeSTT#readme)

- Handy (Free/Libre, offline, Whisper-based, acts as a keyboard)
I’ve read lots of positive feedback on Handy—even though I haven’t tried it myself. The workflow is simple: press a hotkey, speak, and Handy pastes your text in the active app. It’s fully offline, works on X11 and Wayland, and gets strong accuracy thanks to Whisper.
Heads up: Handy lets you pick your own shortcut key, but it actually overrides the keyboard shortcut for start/stop recording. That means it can clash with other tools that depend on major shortcut combos—including Orca’s custom keybindings if you use a screen reader. If your workflow relies on certain shortcuts, this might need adjustment or careful planning before you commit.
GitHub Repo https://github.com/cjpais/Handy) | Demo https://handy.computer)

Real-Time Transcription in a Window (Copy/Paste Workflow)

If you’re okay with speaking into a dedicated app, then copying, these options offer great GUIs and power features:

- Speech Note by @mkiol https://mastodon.social/@mkiol
FLOSS, offline, multi-language GUI app—perfect for quick notes and batch transcription. Not a system-wide keyboard, but super easy to use and works on both desktops and Linux phones.
Flathub https://flathub.org/apps/net.mkiol.SpeechNote | LinuxPhoneApps https://linuxphoneapps.org/apps/net.mkiol.speechnote/)

- WhisperLive (by Collabora)
Real-time transcription in a terminal or window—great for meetings, lectures, and captions. Manual copy/paste required to get the text to other apps.
GitHub Repo https://github.com/collabora/WhisperLive)

More Tools for Tinkerers

If you like building your own or want extra control, check out:
- Vosk: Lightweight, lots of language support. GitHub https://alphacephei.com/vosk/)
- Kaldi: Powerful, best for custom setups. Website https://kaldi-asr.org/)
- Simon: Voice control automation. Website https://simon-listens.org/)
- voice2json: Phrase-level and command recognition. GitHub https://github.com/synesthesiam/voice2json)

Pro Tips

- Desktop Environment: X11 vs. Wayland affects how keyboard hooks and app focus actually operate.
- Ready-Made vs. DIY: If you want plug-and-play, try Speech Note or Handy first. Into automation or customization? RealtimeSTT is perfect.
- Follow the Community: @thorstenvoice offers tons of open-source voice tech insights.

Screen Reader Integration

Looking for robust screen reader support? Linux has you covered:

- Orca (GNOME/MATE): The most customizable GUI screen reader out there. The default voice (eSpeak) is robotic, but you can swap it for something better and fine-tune verbosity so it reads only what matters.
- Speakup: Console-based, ideal for terminal.
- Emacspeak: The solution for Emacs fans.

💡 Orca is part of my daily toolkit. It took time to get the settings just right (especially verbosity!) but it’s absolutely worth it. If you use a screen reader—what setup makes it bearable or even enjoyable for you?

Final Thoughts

If you’re starting from scratch, try Handy for direct typing (just watch those shortcuts if you use a screen reader!) or Speech Note for GUI-based transcription. Both are privacy-friendly, local, and accessible—ideal for everyday Linux use.

Is there a FLOSS gem missing here?
Sharing what works (and what doesn’t!) helps the entire community.

Resources:
Speech Note on Flathub https://flathub.org/apps/net.mkiol.SpeechNote
Handy GitHub https://github.com/cjpais/Handy
Speak to AI Guide https://dev.to/ashbuk/i-built-an-offline-voice-typing-app-for-linux-speak-to-ai-3ab5
RealtimeSTT https://github.com/KoljaB/RealtimeSTT

#Linux #SpeechToText #FLOSS #Accessibility #VoiceKeyboard #ScreenReader #Whisper #Handy #SpeechNote #OpenSource #Community #voicetyping #LocalSTT #TTStools #SpeechRecognition #A11y #Linuxtools #Voicekeyboard #Whisper #Handy #speech-to-text #SpeechNote #review #ScreenReaders #ORCA #FOSS

🚀 اكتشف GT-GMT – مدير الإقلاع الشامل على GNU/Linux!

إدارة GRUB وsystemd-boot وrEFInd أصبحت سهلة، آمنة وتفاعلية، مباشرة من الطرفية أو عبر AppImage.

🔹 تثبيت عن بعد:

bash <(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/SalehGNUTUX/GT-GMT/main/install_online.sh)

🔹 نسخة AppImage مستقلة: تحميل GT-GMT AppImage

🔹 المستودع على GitHub: زيارة مستودع GT-GMT

💡 واجهة سهلة، دعم عربي، نسخ احتياطية، واستكشاف الأنظمة المثبتة. جربه الآن وامنح جهازك القوة الكاملة لإدارة الإقلاع! 💻✨

#مدير_الإقلاع #لينكس #أدوات_لينكس #نظام_تشغيل #GRUB #systemd_boot #rEFInd #برمجيات_حرة #مجتمع_لينكس #تكنولوجيا #برمجيات_مفتوحة #أدوات_نظام #تقنية #مطورين

#GTGMT #BootManager #Linux #GNU_Linux #GRUB #systemd_boot #rEFInd #OpenSource #AppImage #LinuxTools #LinuxUtilities #LinuxAdmin #SysAdmin #TechTools #Software #FreeSoftware #ArabicTech #LinuxCommunity #LinuxArabic #OpenSourceTools #gnutux

Hans Meier 1312 (@lunte161@todon.eu)

@c_merriweather@social.linux.pizza @itsfoss@mastodon.social - Any tool that can edit/extract/inject files from .trd images (ZX Spectrum BetaDisk) would be a decent start. - Software that can serve files to an Interface1 for ZX Spectrums. - Emulators for Pentagon/Scorpion/Evolution/Sprinter Clone variants (the later has a special MAME build that only exists for Windows).

Todon.eu
Modern Linux Tools - Gamedev Guide

Programming notes for Unreal Engine, Houdini, Game Development, Math, & Graphics