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Goals and Principles — Modal Collective

Our Goals A Secure Free Desktop The free desktop is a capable drop-in substitute for Windows and macOS today. However, important areas of the platform still need work, particularly around sandboxing and accessibility. We’re involved in work around Flatpak, portals, and other infrastructure components trying to close these gaps. Phones without Monopolies The most viable direction for a phone operating system independent of the Apple/Google duopoly is expanding the existing free desktop ecosystem to phones. We are involved in this at all levels, from hardware enablement work in the kernel, to input work in GNOME Shell, to making the UI in individual apps adapt to the phone form factor.

Adding Supernote PDF Annotation Support to Sioyek

One of the core FOSS principles is the freedom to study how software works and adapt it to your needs. In practice, though, diving into a large, unfamiliar codebase in a domain you’re not an expert in, using a programming language you’re not necessarily proficient with, is hard.

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Choose Your Own Adventure: The EU AI Act and Openish AI

NOTE: This post was published based on a draft of the EU AI Act. The official version of the EU AI Act uses slightly different section numbers than the leaked draft discussed below, and it has been…

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Happy Birthday Drupal!

January 15, 2026 marks the 25th anniversary of the Drupal 1.0.0 release. While WordPress and Drupal try to solve many of the same problems, both are thriving Open Source projects that have stood the test of time. In the battle of open vs. closed source, we're stronger together. So we should celebrate each other's major milestones and the communities that support them.

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Package Management Systems Mess

The focus of this post is on “universal” package management systems. There are a lot of these. Some make sense but a lot of them are very flawed and just makes package management more difficult on a system. Learning Normal Package Managers Normal package managers like apt and pacman can sometimes be annoying too. It means that if you use various different distributions that are designed to work well with a specific package manager and are different from each other, it means you end up having to read the manual of all of them and having to remember more crap to do the same thing.

310 - Mitchell Hashimoto on Ghostty & His Agentic Coding Workflow - Fragmented | AI Developer Podcast

Mitchell Hashimoto co-founded HashiCorp, built some of the most impressive DevOps tools like Vagrant and Terraform, sold the company to IBM — and then built a terminal. Ghostty is now where a huge chunk of agentic coding actually happens. Mitchell was an AI skeptic. We walk through his six-step adoption framework and the workflows he uses day to day — warm-start research, Hail Mary prompts across twenty GitHub issues, and knowing when to let the agent slam dunk it.

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