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#oss

6 posts6 participants2 posts today

#Schwarmintellligenz gefragt.
ich suche ein #OSS self hostable #Datenschutzmanagementsystem für Vereine oder kleinere Organisationen.

Ziel ist die klassischen Dokumentationspflichten der #DSGVO wie ein VVT, TOMs, AVV etc. möglichst praktikabel in Software abzubilden und auch für Menschen die damit noch nicht so viel zu tun hatten zugänglich zu machen und die Arbeit im Verein zu erleichtern. Optimum, wäre wenn das ganze in Nextcloud integriert ist.

Bereits gefunden hatte ich schon:
- github.com/h2-invent/open-date Siet etwas deprecated aus und beim letzen Testen im UX eher undurchdacht
- Verinice: Gut aber totaler Overkill und als Clientbasiertes System für Vereine eher ungeeignet, da jede Person sich den Client installieren muss anstatt einfach eine Webseite aufzurufen.

Open Source Datenschutzmanagement System. Contribute to H2-invent/open-datenschutzcenter development by creating an account on GitHub.
GitHubGitHub - H2-invent/open-datenschutzcenter: Open Source Datenschutzmanagement SystemOpen Source Datenschutzmanagement System. Contribute to H2-invent/open-datenschutzcenter development by creating an account on GitHub.

random, but how cool is it that the original code for the Apollo 11 Guidance Computer is #opensource on GitHub?

sometimes we focus so much on the issues at hand that we forget about the bigger picture, and damn this is so cool - #oss is truly the best 🤩
github.com/chrislgarry/Apollo-

Original Apollo 11 Guidance Computer (AGC) source code for the command and lunar modules. - chrislgarry/Apollo-11
GitHubGitHub - chrislgarry/Apollo-11: Original Apollo 11 Guidance Computer (AGC) source code for the command and lunar modules.Original Apollo 11 Guidance Computer (AGC) source code for the command and lunar modules. - chrislgarry/Apollo-11

GitHub urges creation of a European Sovereign Tech Fund 🇪🇺
New study proposes €350M+ to fund OSS maintenance, security & ecosystem health 💶
Model builds on Germany’s success & stresses low bureaucracy, pooled funding & political independence 🛠️
OSS is infrastructure—let’s fund it like it 🧱

github.blog/open-source/mainta

The GitHub Blog · We need a European Sovereign Tech FundWith a new feasibility study, GitHub’s developer policy team is building a coalition of policymakers and industry to close the maintenance funding gap.
#OSS#EU#Europe
Continued thread

After two weeks of writing, revising, and trying to make everything as digestible as possible, I finally published "GNOME Calendar: A New Era of Accessibility Achieved in 90 Days", where I explain in detail the steps we took to turn GNOME Calendar from an app that was literally unusable with a keyboard and screen reader to an app that is (finally) accessible to keyboard and screen reader users as of GNOME 49!

tesk.page/2025/07/25/gnome-cal

TheEvilSkeleton · GNOME Calendar: A New Era of Accessibility Achieved in 90 DaysThere is no calendaring app that I love more than GNOME Calendar. The design is slick, it works extremely well, it is touchpad friendly, and best of all, the community around it is just full of wonderful developers, designers, and contributors worth collaborating with, especially with the recent community growth and engagement over the past few years. Georges Stavracas and Jeff Fortin Tam are some of the best maintainers I have ever worked with, especially Jeff’s underappreciated superhuman capabilities to voluntarily coordinate huge initiatives and issue trackers. One of many Jeff’s initiatives is gnome-calendar#1036: the accessibility initiative. It is a big and detailed list of issues related to accessibility, and regularly gets updated. The upcoming release of GNOME, 49, will feature the biggest update GNOME Calendar has ever received (excluding the initial release). It will also be the accessibility update, where we managed to turn GNOME Calendar from an app that was literally unusable with a keyboard and assistive technology, to an app that is actually functional with a keyboard and screen reader in about three months. This article will explain in details about the fundamental issues that held back accessibility in GNOME Calendar since the very beginning of its existence, the progress we have made with accessibility as well as our thought process in achieving it, and the now and future of accessibility in GNOME Calendar.

Edit: this is a positive, pro Open Source post, not a "us" against "them". When an Open Source project makes progress, is a progress for all the Open Source world.

FreeBSD 15.0 will allow users to install KDE Desktop directly from the installer. This is great news. I'm reading the comments on various news sites: “It’s too late”, or “What’s the point? No one uses it”. Or even “We already have Linux, we don’t need another OS”.

I may sound repetitive, but I really don’t understand why, in the Open Source world, people aren’t happy to have more alternatives to consider. Whether it's social networks, operating systems, or software in general, many seem to get stuck on the most popular solution and almost ideologically reject alternatives.
Fear of change?
Maybe - which is why progress is welcome, because once they see what other solutions are capable of, I’m sure they'll start to give them a chance.

Just yesterday I was talking about this with a colleague, but I’ll write about it in another post.

Time for my coffee.

How successful has the SciML Small Grants program been at getting newcomers to contribute to open source software #oss for #sciml #julialang and #ai4science? Very!

* 13 total projects initiated
* ~90% success rate

See the blog post summary of the first year!

sciml.ai/news/2025/07/20/sciml

sciml.aiSciML: Open Source Software for Scientific Machine LearningOpen Source Software for Scientific Machine Learning

For those who have InfoSec, privacy, security, and/or related technology expertise…

Would you use Bitchat?

(Feel free to elaborate in the comments and/or boost if you’d like to see the opinion of others.)