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Openaudible alternative
Openaudible alternative






openaudible alternative openaudible alternative
  1. #OPENAUDIBLE ALTERNATIVE FULL#
  2. #OPENAUDIBLE ALTERNATIVE PASSWORD#

OpenAudible is an open-source shareware ($12, as of 2021) application for converting Audible audiobooks into mp3 files. I use it across almost every device I have. I love it because I have convenient access to secure passwords and my data is under my control (as opposed to an external service).īpytop is a stable and generally reliable system monitor tool for Unix systems. Although it is a bit of a pain to set up correctly, you can run it in docker and back up your credentials as sql files to your hearts content. It is efficient enough to run on something as small as a raspberry pi.

#OPENAUDIBLE ALTERNATIVE PASSWORD#

Vaultwarden is a self-hosted fork of Bitwarden, a password management server, written in rust. It’s pretty and fast and works well for file search, unlike GNOME’s launcher. It’s free, FOSS, fast, and awesome.Īdded SciHub is an online platform for making paywalled research papers available to any interested scientist.Īlbert is a launcher for linux distributions. I have been using it, it’s been pretty much flawless. These are not expert reviews, just my opinions as a humble user and enthusiast.ĭoi2bib is an online utility which takes a doi (whether it be a book, scientific article, data object, or other) and converts it into a well-formatted BibTeX entry. If you find your favorite website/program/code in the Hall of Shame or the bane of your cyber-existence in the Hall of Fame, fret not.

#OPENAUDIBLE ALTERNATIVE FULL#

Then there is the HOF’s antithesis, the Hall of Shame: a list full of buggy, intrusive, resource-heavy, or otherwise appalling software which should simply be rm -rf’d off the face of the planet. Hopefully you, dear reader, find some of them useful too. are doing good in the world, thanks to the kind hearts of their developers, or.have huge pros with respect to their cons,.While it doesn’t include all the software I’ve ever found useful (e.g., things I use every day but have their problems), it does contain some which: The Hall of Fame is a running compendium of my favorite codes, tools, and websites to which I owe a great deal of saved time and praise. And I mean software in all of its forms - from robust bash scripts which hide in the internet’s shadows, to the expansive open-source projects known the world over, to weirdly helpful websites which refuse to run ads, and even to a select few high-gloss corporate products. Much as great literature, high art, or great music deserves praise, so does software.








Openaudible alternative