I guess I’m becoming a dinosaur, and now I don’t know where to find out about new FOSS stuff being developed, when new releases are out, etc.
I used to get it all on USENET and mailing lists, and then later on sourceforge.net and freshmeat.net. Now I track some things on https://freshcode.club/, but I don’t see much that’s ‘fresh’. Maybe new updates, but not too many new packages. sourceforge still exists, but it doesn’t seem current.
If I know about a project I’ll follow it on GitHub, but I’m looking for a place to find out about new things that I didn’t know I wanted yet.
tl;dr: Where can I watch to see promising new FOSS software projects?
I don’t. When I have a need for software I got look it up.
Removed by mod
I also try to get along with a small amount of software and I also mainly stick with default configurations. It is a great feeling when setting up a new PC or a device that there is little need to install a bunch of software and mess with a lot of configurations just to get my learned workflow up and running. Therefore there also isn’t really a need to follow new software releases.
i don’t use tons of stuff on my phone anymore, but i have lots of stuff on my computer
Generally I read HackerNews and Lemmy communities like this one. Once in a while interesting projects will get highlighted.
But for the most part, once I identify a need, I’ll look through alternativeto.net and see what the popular open source options are.
Demo discs from magazines, where else?
Also I live in 1997 because it’s the only place I can afford a house
Time to sacrifice a robot and dial-up the BBS to see what’s fresh.
On android (though I wish I was using a true gnu/Linux phone…) I open Neo store every once in a while and peruse the explore tab, sorting by most recently updated. Neo store is a better f-droid client (a source for open source android apps)
For desktop Linux, i guess you could do the same, (though for some reason i haven’t) and peruse the free sofyware marketplace that comes with your linux distro. I also used to google articles about top 10 new open source apps for ubuntu 2023, or similar google searches. I also used to read a bunch of Linux, open source, and linux hardware related sub-reddits that I’ve been slowly trying to replace with Lemmy communities, right now I subscribe to:
C/f-droid
C/hardware
C/homelab
C/Linux
C/linuxhardware
C/opensource
If anyone has anymore I should subscribe to, suggest away!
I also browse YouTube which in the past has suggested videos of people reviewing new open source apps or software. Though those video suggestions have gotten worse as YouTube’s algorithms have gotten worse in the last few years.
Also in the past I’d peruse https://alternativeto.net/ to see if there’s anything better in the open source world for proprietary software, or even alternatives to existing open source software I use.
Interested to hear more about what others do!
linking those communities properly:
[email protected] and [email protected]
i think i did this right but im not 100% sure, so please let me know if i did anything wrong
Lots of good suggestions already commented. I browse subs and communities, browse fdroid regularly and have a scroll through sourceforge/ git*/ alternativeto/ linux distro repositories now and again
One time i was really bored and just sorted projects on gitlab and github by stars and scrolled page after page finding many interesting projects. Then finding one thing makes you think of another which you can go look in to
I usually just browse [https://flathub.org/]. I’ve found more than a few great projects this way.
For software running on GNU Emacs I like reading Emacs News: https://sachachua.com/blog/category/emacs-news/
Slashdot, hacker news feeds and some communities here. I dont really try to keep up with commercial tech since most of it is bundled with DRM or spyware with exceptions such as the steamdeck.
I’m only interested FOSS stuff myself. I subscribe to some security and privacy communities here in addition to some technology ones. If the news is big enough we’ll hear about it one way or another.
Discoverability happens organically out of need. Eg search “split pdfs linux” and I’ll get a cli tool for it.
Thats my take on it anyway.
Like others suggested, lemmy communities and some news sites like HackerNews.
But also some YouTube channels like Mental Outlaw, The Linux experiment and Brodie Robertson (most of them also have Odysee channels if you don’t want to use YouTube). Also Luke Smith (actually he shills a lot of foss software).
Lemmy, Hacker News, Mailing Lists … Sometimes I watch the Primeagen, Theo and such.
itsfoss.com
DistroWatch news
The Linux Experiment
Link aggregators