I am sorry if this has been asked before, but when or will it be open sourced. It is the best Lemmy Client i have used yet but i dont like anything being closed source and i read somewhere the dev wants to open source it at some point. Just interested if there is an estimate.

  • Kuro@lemmy.caM
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    1 year ago

    Hi, it will be open sourced when it’s ready. Maintaining open source software is incredibly stressful and my focus right now is on adding features and improvements so please have patience with me! I know it’s very important to some users but there are also trade-offs from my side. Right now I don’t have any overhead of maintaining a public project and I know every line of code in Connect which helps me to fix bugs quickly or add new things. It’s also nice not having anyone to blame but yourself for bugs introduced. If you’re looking to contribute code or lend your time I’d suggest going over to the main Lemmy codebase for now until Connect is ready.

    Cheers, Kuro

    • WreckingBANG@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      Ok, no Problem, i understand you. I did not want to create pressure, i just wanted to know if you are still wanting to open source it. I really like the App and i will definitely use it once it is Open Source. I for myself set the Goal to not use proprietary Software anymore. This does not mean i dont trust you, its just my philosophy to try to not use anything closed source. Thank you for taking the time to reply! (:

    • Sir Aramis@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Not OP, but I’d like to contribute if possible. I am a developer and I am quite experienced in building both Android and web apps. IMO the biggest upside of the software being open source is not that the code is auditable (although that is definitely a plus as well) but that others can contribute to the development of the application as well.

      If the dev wants to monetize the app later on, they can still have an open source “core” but bolt on “premium” features that can be proprietary. Think of Chromium and Chrome or (ironically) CentOS and RHEL. It also increases the bus factor as others can take up the mantle if the current dev no longer can/wants to maintain the app.

      • mikeboltonshair@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Ahh okay very cool then, I see so many people saying they want open source yet don’t know how to read it anyway, myself included

        Good to know if I had any skill I’d do the same

        • WreckingBANG@lemmy.mlOP
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          1 year ago

          Open Source is not just for people that know how to code. If the project is a bigger project other people review the code and point things out that are wrong. So everybody is profiting from Open Source Project not just people that understand and read the code. I for example can code in java, kotlin and dart. So i can look at android apps and know if i can trust them. If i see something suspicious i would point it out. But i dont know Rust for example. But someone else does and points out if something is wrong. Thats the beauty of Open Source Software.

          • mikeboltonshair@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I get the benefits of open source I was just pointing out it’s kind of like TOS documents most people don’t actually read them we just rely on others to do it for us and tell us if it’s okay, I was curious if you were someone who actually understands the code

            Which again both of those instances apply to me too, I can’t read code and I def don’t read through terms of service

            • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              I don’t code either and I am not that technically minded with any kind of software code

              I think the thing with Open Source Software is a system of trust with developers and users … by keeping things out in the open, the developers are basically telling everyone that their work is freely open to be scrutinized by those with the ability to review the work … it also keeps the developers careful as they know that their work can be taken, reproduced, changed, manipulated and repurposed … everyone is taking a risk and basing everything on trust with one another by being Open Source

              Otherwise it is closed source and users are not able to decipher what is happening with the software and users are not aware of what is being done or for what reason and users have to trust that the developer is fair minded, moral and trustworthy.

              To me Open Source means everyone trusting one another … developers and users trusting each other

              Closed Source only allows trust to run one way … the users trusting the developer (which can be a monolithic company … and how much can you trust a company?)

    • KitchenNo2246@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Open source isn’t just about auditing the source. Sometimes a bug might be found that the developer might not have the time to fix so someone else with the know-how can contribute the changes to fix the bug. Some goes for any features/enhancements that would be nice to be added

  • Alligatorade@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Personnellement j’ai désinstallé connect du fait que ce n’était pas open source. Cela est dommage car l’App est pas mal mais je préfère rester sur jerboa pour le moment

  • impulse@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Honestly, this brigading for FOSS on Lemmy is a bit annoying. Suppose the dev decides to charge a one-time fee once the app is mostly stable and done. FOSS wouldn’t be a good option for that.

    Personally, with the amount of effort Kuro is putting in, I hope he has a solid monetization plan in the works, because this app could become one of the more popular ones for Lemmy and they more than deserve earning money for their hard work, that is not relying on donations.