noson-app VS salmon

Compare noson-app vs salmon and see what are their differences.

noson-app

The essential to control music from your SONOS devices on Linux platforms (by janbar)
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noson-app salmon
1 1
323 731
- 1.5%
7.8 5.0
2 months ago about 2 months ago
QML C++
GNU General Public License v3.0 only GNU General Public License v3.0 only
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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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.

noson-app

Posts with mentions or reviews of noson-app. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects.

salmon

Posts with mentions or reviews of salmon. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-02-24.
  • Why should academic researchers use Rust?
    3 projects | /r/rust | 24 Feb 2023
    Rust makes distribution and maintenance near trivial. My lab develops a fairly widely-used tool, salmon, for the quantification of transcript expression from RNA-seq data. This tool is written in C++14, and has a substantial number of dependencies. The process of updating the tool (e.g. bumping dependencies) and cutting a new release is painful. To maintain widespread availability, we distribute this tool using bioconda which uses it's own CI and setup to build new releases for (in our case) Linux and MacOS. Things break all the time. For example, recently, they bumped the compiler used to build packages. This changed some default "implementation defined" behavior, causing previously functioning code to fail. We didn't find this locally, because we didn't test that specific compiler version. When we tried to release a new version, we had to go back and fix things etc. This is not just because different compilers exist, but because the C++ specification is soooo complicated and the set of undefined and implementation defined behavior is sooo broad that it's very brittle and it's easy for things to "break" via bitrot. However, the stability provided by Rust has been phenomenal so far. In our code, we only use stable Rust features, and we have benefited tremendously from the empirical guarantee that valid Rust code (except in exceptional cases like latent bugs in the language) will remain valid. While not all crates follow it religiously, there is a reasonable respect for semantic versioning. Thus, cutting a new release of one of our Rust tools is often as simple as just updating the Cargo.toml (and Cargo.lock in the case of applications), tagging a new release in GitHub, and letting the bioconda CI do it's business with the tagged artifacts. The build "scripts" are almost always trivial because the builds just work, across platforms, across CIs, etc. Now, new projects like cargo dist look like they make this process even simpler.

What are some alternatives?

When comparing noson-app and salmon you can also consider the following projects:

sonos-web - Sonos controller for your web browser

rnaseq - RNA-seq analyses.

Sonos-Kids-Controller - Software for self made touchscreen jukeboxes for kids. Supports Spotify streaming and uses Sonos for audio output.

rnaseqc - Fast, efficient RNA-Seq metrics for quality control and process optimization

open-sonos-controller - Lightweight sonos remote cotrol for linux

gEAR - The gEAR Portal was created as a data archive and viewer for gene expression data including microarrays, bulk RNA-Seq, single-cell RNA-Seq and more.

flatpak-platform - The elementary OS and AppCenter Flatpak platform

IntaRNA - Efficient target prediction incorporating accessibility of interaction sites

soco-cli - Command Line Interface to Control Sonos Sound Systems

nanopolish - Signal-level algorithms for MinION data