novelWriter
picosnitch
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novelWriter | picosnitch | |
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40 | 33 | |
1,812 | 587 | |
- | - | |
9.8 | 8.6 | |
5 days ago | 4 months ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
novelWriter
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Thank you to the forum - The last 72hrs have been amazing!
Never buy the book, start writing the book, https://novelwriter.io/ ;)
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✨Top 5 Awsome React Component
novelwriter.io
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Author Resources: Tools and Software
https://novelwriter.io/ is free and open source (I haven't used it, only know about it).
- I'm from Linux and I'd like to ask a question. Is there an Open Source map editor hereabouts?
- NovelWriter. Some think AI have your imagination - Prove them wrong.
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How to install Davinci?
novelWriter for books is like building a dungeon in D&D I might add. All it needs is a map editor ;)
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What kind of applications are missing from the Linux ecosystem?
Novelwriter almost hits the sweet spot, but misses some features and is written in python, which makes some features hard to implement due to the nature of the programming language.
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Getting into writing novels
Try this software. It may well help you to write better -> novelWriter.
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Looking for a 'Scrivener Light'
Alternatively, if you want Scrivener-like and are happy with open source projects, novelWriter scratches some of the same itch and is (a) free and (b) available on Linux, Windows, and macOS: it has a similar project-oriented interface to Scrivener, can export projects in HTML, Open Document, Markdown, Plain Text, or PDF, supports tagging and metadata, and uses Markdown for authoring. It's much less hot on importing foreign files (it's really an authoring tool) but is implemented in Python, uses XML/Json for internal files/metadata/configuration, and in use feels like an early version of Scrivener 1.x (which is really what your students want, but Lit'n'Latte discontinued it about a decade ago and you can no longer buy it).
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I'm Andrew Rowe, the author of Arcane Ascension, Weapons & Wielders, etc. AMA!
MSWord is surprising to hear. I would've thought some specific tools like Vellum. There are free and open source tools as well, like https://novelwriter.io/
picosnitch
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Linux runtime security agent powered by eBPF
Yep, and from my experience too (made a tool that monitors network traffic with eBPF [1]) in addition to those issues there is also a sizable latency hit.
[1] https://github.com/elesiuta/picosnitch
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Monitor bandwidth usage with bandwhich (and build a snap package of it)
Similar to bandwhich, I recently created a snap of my own bandwidth monitor, picosnitch [1]. However I was only able to get it working with classic confinement (so it can't be published on the store) due to there being no snap interfaces for fanotify or BPF kfuncs.
I already packaged it for nearly every distro, but unfortunately most don't have dash [2] in their repos so the user needs to install it separately, and I was hoping that snap would be an easier solution for that.
[1] https://github.com/elesiuta/picosnitch/blob/master/snap/snap...
[2] https://repology.org/project/python:dash/versions
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What kind of applications are missing from the Linux ecosystem?
I created picosnitch which can do this
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gnome-shell Runaway Bandwidth - More in Comments
If you're still having this issue, you can try picosnitch (I recently made it available in copr).
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Help identifying which process is sending network requests
You can use picosnitch for this, I'm the developer and this is exactly the use case I had in mind when designing it (24/7 monitoring of traffic on a per executable basis, primarily in containerized environments).
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Little Snitch Mini
I wrote picosnitch [1] which has the same notification and bandwidth monitoring features, however it doesn't block traffic for a couple reasons: avoiding scope creep so I can focus on more reliable detection and do things like hash every executable, which makes it harder to block traffic in a timely fashion.
https://github.com/elesiuta/picosnitch
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System monitor that lists network usage for each process
I also wrote a program (picosnitch) which is newer than that list and has a bunch of features none of those other tools have, in case you're interested in checking it out!
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linux security
which basically says launchpad builds the package directly from that repository, which states: This repository is an import of the Git repository at https://github.com/elesiuta/picosnitch.git.
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Linux software list. Discussion and advice welcome!
picosnitch - monitors and hashes programs that connect to the internet, and can check them with VirusTotal.
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What's your goto open source network & bandwidth monitors
For Linux, I created picosnitch which does exactly what you're looking for.
What are some alternatives?
manuskript - A open-source tool for writers
opensnitch - OpenSnitch is a GNU/Linux interactive application firewall inspired by Little Snitch.
proselint - A linter for prose.
goflow2 - High performance sFlow/IPFIX/NetFlow Collector
Apostrophe - Mirror of
ElastiFlow - Network flow analytics (Netflow, sFlow and IPFIX) with the Elastic Stack
Zettlr - Your One-Stop Publication Workbench
How-To-Secure-A-Linux-Server - An evolving how-to guide for securing a Linux server.
CudaText - Cross-platform text editor, written in Free Pascal
conntrack_exporter - Prometheus exporter for tracking network connections
KeenWrite - Free, open-source, cross-platform desktop Markdown text editor with live preview, string interpolation, and math.
nsntrace - Perform network trace of a single process by using network namespaces.