Windows: Definitely NVDA (github.com/nvaccess/nvda)
Linux: AT-SPI, ATK, Orca for the graphical side of things. The console/terminal is pretty well supported.
Thanks for those links.
I recently looked for a plugin that reads highlighted text in firefox that "just works"... but found limited success (this was on linux). But really great to see that there are large-scale, OS-level already established FLOSS projects out there.
Kingsajz [1] is one of my favorite Polish movies of all time. It's about way for people to consume some elixir and become tiny (it's an adult movie, although may not sound like it).
The special effects are absolutely phenomenal - it's mind boggling that it was done in 1987, and with communist budgets!
Unfortunately looks like no English subtitles are available.
That has never happened to me and I've been using the android version for years. I will agree that the Blackberry Hub version for android is indeed not as good as the original Blackberry version (on BB10), but i still prefer it over the alternatives. In fact I still pay them $1/month as it's subscription based...
This thing is magical! I use it as a quick scientific paper finder.
Basically have a folder with, probably thousands by now, papers (each file's name contains paper title, authors, year, journal) and by typing a couple words can fuzzy search for stuff by whatever fields.
It also works incredibly nicely with vim as a fuzzy search for either files or phrases within files.
A nice, I do the same but I convert all books, papers and powerpoints to pdf files with a rondom name or i use a hash of the content as name. Then in use ripgrepall with fzf to search for the information i'm looking for.
so do I. Although I discovered it rather late - in 2004.
It's remarkable how configurable it is. I adopted some version of what this guy did:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdSgf-IykIo
to do "manual tiling". Also can't find anything modern that even remotely can compare.
Thanks, I know someone who can use this. I also saw a year or two ago some guy was selling some product or service or something aimed at supporting the older hardware with newer streaming services. I just don't generally use the streaming stuff.
I second this. I've been using various squeezebox devices (and software players) for years, for both listening to my own music collection as well as streaming (spotify mostly). The squeezebox server (i.e the core software that various clients can connect to) has been open-sourced, and is still actively developed/updated. There are also open-source software clients readily available.