I used Plex for my home media for almost a year, then it stopped playing nice for reasons I gave up on diagnosing. While looking at alternatives, I found Jellyfin which is much more responsive, IMO, and the UI is much nicer as well.

It gets relegated to playing Fraggle Rock and Bluey on repeat for my kiddo these days, but I am absolutely in love with the software.

What are some other FOSS gems that are a better experience UX/UI-wise than their proprietary counterparts?

EDIT: Autocorrect turned something into “smaller” instead of what I meant it to be when I wrote this post, and I can’t remember what I meant for it to say so it got axed instead.

  • Lettuce eat lettuceM
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    2171 year ago

    Bitwarden password manager. I’ve used several proprietary PW managers, Bitwarden is by far the most stable, intuitive, and functional IMO.

    • @[email protected]
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      401 year ago

      Bitwarden is so good. I cant be bothered to self host it tbh, but ill gladly throw money their way for premium for having the best cloud-hosted PW manager

      • LUHG
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        151 year ago

        My argument for self host of something that needs to be ultra secure is, they will do a better job at it than me.

        • @[email protected]
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          71 year ago

          For me the argument is more that there is always a point where I duck up my self hosting infrastructure and at this point I will need passwords to fix it.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 year ago

      It is great and I do use it, and it was super easy to export from lastpass

      BUT the autofill is so unreliable in comparison, it’s annoying

      • @[email protected]
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        131 year ago

        Try the AutoFill keyboard shortcut Ctrl-Shift-L (or Cmd-Shift-L on Mac). Works well enough for me.

        • @[email protected]
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          71 year ago

          But that’s only auto after a manual button press, that’s half the auto! In lastpass when I visited a page, it would just fill it in and log in for me without any input.

          Sometimes bit warden doesn’t even realise it has a password for the site because it’s looking for a specific URL rather than a wildcard match to the domain.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            If you opened it once, so a process exists, it usually will work with it’s autofill. At least on my Samsung it does after opening it once.

            It sucks for login like Twitter X though.

      • @[email protected]
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        91 year ago

        Yeah that could definitely be improved. There’s been talk on GitHub issues about adding support to fill Shadow DOM fields, honestly don’t know if they’ve done it yet but that would be a big help for web apps like HomeAssistant.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      131 year ago

      I’ve been looking for a good password manager, and I’ve heard a LOT of good things about Bitwarden… guess I’ll have to bite and see what all the fuss is about!

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        Pro tip : if you self host use vaultwarden. It’s 100℅ compatible with all bitwarden clients but has many more features and is lighter weight

    • @[email protected]
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      121 year ago

      Also KeePass, I’ve switched from bitwarden to KeePassDX on mobile and set up syncing to nextcloud and google drive. Aegis for time based OTP’s.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Yeah it is pretty solid. I used to use KeepassX, which while also a very cool project, was a bit more tinkering than needed. I hosted the database on a mainstream cloud provider though, and figured at that point, you might as well use the cloud storage of a company with a great security reputation instead and just bundle all together. And so BitWarden.

      • Lettuce eat lettuceM
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        21 year ago

        Yeah, I just went with Bitwarden’s own cloud because it was so affordable, accessible, and easy.

        And their integrations are really solid too.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Bitwarden is to me the simplest and most effective PW manager, just perfect at what it does. I however switched from Bitwarden to Proton Pass only because the latter has a mail aliases generation integrated (with Proton Unlimited)

      • Insaan
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        11 year ago

        You can setup anonaddy or duckduckgo with bitwarden to generate alias emails automatically. The best setup we get for free.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      I used Bitwarden a lot but it pissed me off that I couldn’t add new entries while offline, that accessing attachments requires me to be online as well, and that attachments are not part of the backup.

      I switched back to Enpass due to that, which has even a slightly better UX IMHO. It’s not FOSS though, but uses the FOSS sqlcipher library for storage. So if push comes to shove, I can still exfiltrate my data without relying on the vendor.