awesome-matrix
alternative-frontends
awesome-matrix | alternative-frontends | |
---|---|---|
2 | 26 | |
105 | 1,760 | |
- | - | |
3.7 | 5.1 | |
about 2 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
awesome-matrix
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Ejabberd scalability: single node with 2M concurrent users (2016
> A node can support, like, 3 concurrent users.
I wish you would joking. But it doesn't depend so much on the users but more on the size of the room / amount of events and the amount of other servers in the room.
However Matrix solves a different problem https://github.com/jryans/awesome-matrix#research so it's a bit unfair to compare both.
I hope someday someone pulls of an memory/cpu efficient matrix protocol implementation.
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Integrations
There's https://github.com/jryans/awesome-matrix but it's incomplete
alternative-frontends
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.rss Feeds for Social Media
use alternative privacy-focused frontends: https://github.com/digitalblossom/alternative-frontends
I use nitter and proxigram to query RSS feeds.
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Show HN: uBlock Origin filters to remove distractions
I use something similar to this, the only differences are because my use case is privacy protection and avoiding algorithmic feeds. I use the Redirector extension for Firefox so that it redirects e.g. Youtube, Twitter, and StackOverflow links to the corresponding alternative frontends Piped, Nitter, and AnonymousOverflow. You can find maintained lists [1] [2] of such projects and their instances. Mostly they are FOSS and privacy-respecting, and they have distraction-free frontends because it's a helpful coincidence of being ethical software.
[1] https://github.com/digitalblossom/alternative-frontends
- Why Do You Still Use Firefox?
- Too many sites are blocking Mullvad IPs these days.
- List of privacy respecting frontends (Reddit, Twitter etc)
- Privacy-respecting web frontends for popular services
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refuse to be a commodity. use libre services.
for a full list, refer this: https://github.com/digitalblossom/alternative-frontends.
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Librewolf passes all the deep privacy tests. Is it the best Firefox fork?
There are front end alternatives for major sites if you really need that btw. I use from time time to time Invidious when I want t o see a YT video for example. As for sites that require tracking cookies to work I simply stopped using them. If a given site requires the use of intrusive "necessary" cookies I just stop using it. I'm convinced is about priorities. If you quit a browser that is safe because is slow, well, you need to re-estate your priorities imho (not you, op, anyone ;) ).
- Attention Degooglers, Let's Update the SideBar
What are some alternatives?
awesome-anti-censorship - curated list of open-source anti-censorship tools
alternative-front-ends - Overview of alternative open source front-ends for popular internet platforms (e.g. YouTube, Twitter, etc.)
awesome-decentralized - 🕶 Awesome list of distributed, decentralized, p2p apps and tools 👍
privacy-redirect - A simple web extension that redirects Twitter, YouTube, Instagram & Google Maps requests to privacy friendly alternatives.
awesome-interview-questions - :octocat: A curated awesome list of lists of interview questions. Feel free to contribute! :mortar_board:
bibliogram
Conversations - Conversations is an open source XMPP/Jabber client for Android
privacy-respecting - Curated List of Privacy Respecting Services and Software
awesome-decentralized-finance - A curated list of awesome decentralized finance projects
blocktube - YouTube™ content blocker
coreutils - upstream mirror
go-incognito - Go Incognito: A Guide to Security, Privacy, & Anonymity