Or just do both at the same time if possible. When I started my daytime job eight years ago, I managed to negotiate a four-day-week. Since then I used the fifth day to do freelancing in projects I find interesting and over the years I've shifted to use it mostly to do voluntary IT work for a local non-profit.
It's free, but it requires also running Postgres and Clickhouse servers instead. I'm short on RAM so I wanted something lightweight even if the disk storage wasn't as efficient as a dedicated timeseries/event DB.
You might want to have a look at Sourcehut (https://sourcehut.org/). If I recall correctly they support e-mail-only workflows, which means you can contribute by sending patches. I haven't used it myself so far. As far as I know Sourcehut has been designed with the e-mail based wokflow used by the Linux kernel community in mind.
So far, Bitwarden has an Android app (two of those didn't), has been security audited (I didn't see anything for those other ones), and the biggest thing is Bitwarden has a much better pricing structure around non business users. It has a free tier and plans for families/non business users, as well as business use. Those others had nothing comparable that I could see except for a limited free tier.
Feature wise (ignoring the mobile apps), some of those seem to have some comparable features like emergency access, sharing, folders, etc, but locked behind a pricing structure that makes them less useful.
So from a look at those other ones, Bitwarden is the superior product for non business/security conscious family use at least. And for business use I don't see how those other ones are better anyway.
I admit Bitwarden is probably the most advanced, but the alternatives I named above (Psono, Passbolt, Passwork) seem not that far behind and some of your research seems a bit superficial.
> Bitwarden has an Android app (two of those didn't)
That's just wrong. All three of the alternatives I mentioned have an Android app. I haven't used any of them, though.
Looking more closely at Passwork, they claim to have open/auditable source code, but I can't find any public code. So they are out of the game anyway.
> Bitwarden has a much better pricing structure around non business users. It has a free tier and plans for families/non business users, as well as business use. Those others had nothing comparable that I could see except for a limited free tier.
Psono's full-featured enterprise version is free for anyone with up to 10 users. I don't see any such generous offer at Bitwarden or elsewhere.
And both, Psono and Passbolt offer unlimited business tiers for only 3€ per user per month which seems to be in the range of what Bitwarden costs. I don't really see your argument for the pricing.
The peculiar problems faced by families, work organisations, 2fa - they've put some time into thing about every sub-problem I've come up with.
Well, just about everything. I'd love if they would let me run my own read only backup servers - ie, a server that mirrors my data stored on theirs, that my device will connect to if theirs isn't up, and that supports a read only version of the web interface.
> I think making it easier for companies to pay open source contributors is the right approach.
Making it easier and making it a common habit. Companies need to realize, that paying maintainers/contributors pays off for them.
> I would love to see a tool that, given a pool of money, will collect dependencies from projects in any language (extensible), find the authors (git commit history, etc.), find where they accept contributions (extensible), and pay them, based on both computed and hand crafted weights.
Looking at https://flossbank.com/, this seems like just what you describe. I don't know how it works exactly, though.
> Making it easier and making it a common habit. Companies need to realize, that paying maintainers/contributors pays off for them.
Definitely agreed.
> Looking at https://flossbank.com/, this seems like just what you describe. I don't know how it works exactly, though.
That looks ... related, but I _detest_ that it relies on injecting ads into package managers. It's also not extensible.
I think an open source tool would be preferable so that incentives don't get skewed by for-profit motives.
I would also prefer if the payments didn't go through a single company. Paying developers through GitHub Sponsors, Patreon, Flattr, or whatever their preferred mechanism is.
Sorry for the shameless plug but I have a problem with the Bialetti Brikka. I think it's great, but recently I did a full cleaning of all parts and since then it stopped working. Each time when the coffee is starting to boil up it spurts out of the hole in the lid and makes a huge mess. I checked everything but didn't find anything that might be causing this. Any ideas how to fix it? Thanks!
You don't leak anything as the link doesn't seem to be accessible publicly (at least for me).
But it also feels kind of strange to me, that they complain about IPv4 shortage while still handing them out with each VPS instance despite a lot of users actually don't need or even don't want to have them. There should be an option, or even a small fee for a public IPv4 on cloud servers.
> You don't leak anything as the link doesn't seem to be accessible publicly (at least for me).
Yes, the forum requires registration and is open for customers only. That's why I said that I hope I don't leak anything (by saying that this topic was discussed in their (private) forum).
There's also Sono Motors, a start-up from Munich, Germany. They aim at delivering something they call a SEV (Solar Electric Vehicle) in 2020. They have an interesting concept and more than 10k reservations. https://sonomotors.com/?lang=en
Thanks for sharing the Sono Motors link.
The Sion model is to be available in 2021 (or at least that is what I read on their website.)
I like this practical little car with energy interface considerations at its core. Solar body panels can add up to 34km range per day, this seems to be a major incremental improvement to the EV model, I think.
Sticker price of 25.5k Euro (16k for base and est. 9.5k for battery) and they let you buy the battery separately or you can lease one.
It seems it will be manufactured in Sweden (Trollhättan). I want to learn more about their (export) US market strategy. Needless to say I do like this SEV concept.