upvpn-app
Tusky
upvpn-app | Tusky | |
---|---|---|
12 | 24 | |
155 | 2,393 | |
9.8% | 0.3% | |
6.0 | 9.8 | |
3 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Rust | Kotlin | |
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.
upvpn-app
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Google to shut down Google One VPN on June 20
If you're looking for VPN alternatives checkout https://UpVPN.app
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Porn restrictions are leading to a VPN boom
https://UpVPN.app for couple of minutes of VPN
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Ask HN: How to choose the desktop platform and tech for desktop app development?
I shipped desktop app for all three major OS Linux, Windows and macOS.
Because of the programming choices of Rust for application/backend and Typescript for frontend - Tauri was perfect fit for me.
So far Tauri documentation has been sufficient (and good) for me to achieve what I wanted inside the application. However, platform specific packaging required extra effort because the app required installation of system service/daemon in addition to the frontend app binary - so platform specific pre-install and post-install scripts which setup (or remove on uninstall) those daemon services were not natively supported in Tauri packaging.
You can browse the code here to see what it takes to package and sign installer for various desktop platforms: https://github.com/upvpn/upvpn-app
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⟳ 4 apps added, 32 updated at f-droid.org
UpVPN - Serverless VPN: A Modern VPN based on WireGuard
- Show HN: Serverless VPN App for Android. Unlimited Devices. Unlimited Data
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I made Serverless VPN upvpn.app
Website: https://upvpn.app
- World's first Serverless VPN: UpVPN
- Hello world! UpVPN now available for macOS, and Linux!
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Share Your Startup - July 2023 - Upvote for Maximum Visibility
Startup Name / URL: UpVPN / https://upvpn.app Location of Your Headquarters San Jose, California, US Elevator Pitch A modern serverless VPN. Saves you money via prepaid, pay as you go pricing model. With unlimited devices per account. Saves you time if you’re setting up your own VPN servers. More details: What life cycle stage is your startup at? Launched a few weeks ago. Your role?: Founder
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Serverless VPN
I applied Serverless model of computing to VPN for https://upvpn.app because there’s a clear boundary when connecting to VPN and disconnecting for short sessions. That drives cost down for the consumers of Serverless VPN.
Tusky
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⟳ 4 apps added, 32 updated at f-droid.org
Tusky (version 24.0): A multi account client for the social network Mastodon
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Getting started with Mastodon
For Android, one option is Tusky.
- Tusks: A beautiful Android client for Mastodon
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Mastodon provides the highest (over 12%) engagement under posts
Mastodon itself doesn't, but maybe he's referring to Tusky, a popular FOSS Mastodon client, preventing its users from logging in with an account tied to an alt-right instance (gab and a few others I think).
They used to also filter any content coming from these accounts but I can't it in the code so they must have removed that.
As for the login block itself it's there: https://github.com/tuskyapp/Tusky/blob/01b3cb3a53b1e08ed26e7...
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Multiple Servers on Mastodon App
Tusky manages multiple accounts.
- I rescued mastodon.au - Ask me anything!
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Is it possible to view a list you created in the mobile app?
You can't in the official app, but you can see them in moshidon, megalodon and tusky. Moshidon and megalodon are both forks of the official app with more features. You should try them out :D
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⟳ 1 apps added, 28 updated at f-droid.org
Tusky (version 20.0): A multi account client for the social network Mastodon
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Fosstodon Hub – More Upgrades
I signed onto Fosstodon last week to give Mastodon another try. I found the overall experience to be massively improved (last time I touched it was in 2017) and the recent traction it has gotten puts it well ahead of anything else IMO (I'm also testing out Farcaster and a few other services, but those seem pretty niche/immature in comparison).
While Mastodon is a bit rough around the edges, it has that same sort of excitement to me when I signed onto Twitter back in 2006, and most of those same friends/connections from those early days have been migrating. Based on the numbers floating around, I think it has enough traction now/critical mass to be it's own pretty exciting thing. While a lot of instances will fail, I don't think economic sustainability is actually a showstopper. Patreon, OpenCollective, any number of tools can handle recurrent donations enough to sustain larger instances, and there probably will be some alternative approaches as well. Migrating accounts between Mastodon instances isn't perfect, but is a core built-in feature, so while there's a bit of instance roulette, I don't think it's such a big deal. There are tools like https://fediverse.observer/ that might help for picking. It even has a map view, which is pretty neat: https://fediverse.observer/map
Here's a rough view of ActivityPub growth: https://fediverse.observer/stats
FWIW, I decided early on as I started researching into the current state of the Fediverse/ActivityPub that I should probably run my own instance. There are hosting providers that provide Mastodon hosting (although most of them like Spacebear and Mastohost are oversubscribed), but as I was researching, I decided something like Pleroma or Missykey would be a better fit anyway. There are some forks and I ended up using a fork of Pleroma, Akkoma (since, while a bit involved, it has pretty decent docs for setting up w/ Docker Compose and overall seems like the best-performing of the bunch, and has good support for most Mastodon clients). I was able to repoint my account from the Fosstodon Mastodon instance (which included migrating my followers!) to my new personal Akkoma instance pretty easily (the only wrinkle was setting up webfinger since I decided I wanted my canonical account id to not be a subdomain).
For those looking for a bit of an overview of what the current "Fediverse" landscape looks like, some resources that helped me get started:
* https://fediverse.party/
* https://joinfediverse.wiki/Main_Page
* https://www.paritybit.ca/blog/mastodon-is-dead-long-live-mis...
For clients btw, I'm using Whalebird https://whalebird.social/ and Sengi https://nicolasconstant.github.io/sengi/ on desktop, and Tusky https://tusky.app/ on mobile.
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Clojure Community on Fediverse
The official app is pretty good and cross-platform. I use Tusky on Android, and really like it. A couple of other tech instances are
What are some alternatives?
MetisFL - The first open Federated Learning framework implemented in C++ and Python.
Husky - MOVED TO https://git.sr.ht/~captainepoch/husky
billabear - Subscription Management and Billing System
mastodon-android - Official Android app for Mastodon
mockoon - Mockoon is the easiest and quickest way to run mock APIs locally. No remote deployment, no account required, open source.
Twidere-Android
Google Fonts - Font files available from Google Fonts, and a public issue tracker for all things Google Fonts
Lemmy - 🐀 A link aggregator and forum for the fediverse
webdevamin - My freelance web agency website
nimiq-mastodon
Figment - A hierarchical configuration library so con-free, it's unreal.
hometown - A supported fork of Mastodon that provides local posting and a wider range of content types.