New developments at Opensource.com The community is hard at work on something new. A distributed database load-balancing architecture with ShardingSphere Edit your photos with open source artificial intelligence 5 reasons virtual machines still matter New developments at Opensource.com The community is hard at work on something new. Tips for running virtual, in-person, and hybrid events Create the perfect blend of virtual and in-person events. Generate web pages from Markdown with Docsify-This This open source tool makes it easier than ever to convert Markdown to web pages. How I used guilt as a motivator for good Guilt is usually considered a negative emotion, but by steering it well, you can achieve surprising success. 3 reasons to host a docathon for your open source project A marathon for documentation is a great way to produce or improve the docs for your open source project. Run a virtual conference using only open source tools Here's how to use open source tools to run your next virtual event. Find the perfect open source tool Project management, business intelligence, reporting, and more. Check these popular projects. Get started My 3 favorite open source productivity apps Streamline your agile workflow and increase your productivity. Learn C by writing a simple game This "guess the number" game is a great introductory program when learning a new programming language. Here's how to write it in C. How to customize your voice assistant with the voice of your choice The Nana and Poppy project enables a voice assistant to greet users with their great-grandchildren's voices instead of a generic AI. 4 lines of code to improve your Ansible play With a tiny bit of effort, you can help the next person by not just mapping the safe path but leaving warnings about the dangers. My Linux Story: How an influential security developer got started in open source Michael Boelen shares how he strengthened Lynis by building a company around the open source, security auditing and hardening tool. Learn Fortran by writing a "guess the number" game Because Fortran was written in the punched card era, its syntax is pretty limited. But you can still write useful and interesting programs with it. Load More
Tips for running virtual, in-person, and hybrid events Create the perfect blend of virtual and in-person events.
Generate web pages from Markdown with Docsify-This This open source tool makes it easier than ever to convert Markdown to web pages.
How I used guilt as a motivator for good Guilt is usually considered a negative emotion, but by steering it well, you can achieve surprising success.
3 reasons to host a docathon for your open source project A marathon for documentation is a great way to produce or improve the docs for your open source project.
Run a virtual conference using only open source tools Here's how to use open source tools to run your next virtual event.
My 3 favorite open source productivity apps Streamline your agile workflow and increase your productivity.
Learn C by writing a simple game This "guess the number" game is a great introductory program when learning a new programming language. Here's how to write it in C.
How to customize your voice assistant with the voice of your choice The Nana and Poppy project enables a voice assistant to greet users with their great-grandchildren's voices instead of a generic AI.
4 lines of code to improve your Ansible play With a tiny bit of effort, you can help the next person by not just mapping the safe path but leaving warnings about the dangers.
My Linux Story: How an influential security developer got started in open source Michael Boelen shares how he strengthened Lynis by building a company around the open source, security auditing and hardening tool.
Learn Fortran by writing a "guess the number" game Because Fortran was written in the punched card era, its syntax is pretty limited. But you can still write useful and interesting programs with it.