Software: Parseable, Next Share, Rnote, Yellow CMS, and OpenSearch
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Get started with Parseable, an open source log storage and observability platform | Opensource.com
Log data is one of the fastest-growing segments across data storage. It's also one of the most complicated spaces. There are several products and solutions with overlapping use cases and confusing marketing.
This article looks at Parseable, a log storage and observability platform. Parseable is geared towards a better user experience, with an easy-to-deploy and use interface and a simple, cloud-native architecture. I'll also show how to set up Parseable with FluentBit to store logs.
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Next Share: Social Sharing Buttons For React Apps
Next Share is a free library for React apps that allows developers to add social media sharing buttons for all popular networks with no effort.
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Rnote: Create Beautiful Handwritten notes and Sketches
Rnote is an open-source vector-based drawing app for sketching, handwritten notes and to annotate documents and pictures. It is an ideal solution for students, teachers and those who own a drawing tablet, it provides features like PDF and picture import and export, an infinite canvas and an adaptive UI for big and small screens.
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Rnote is a Free Libre Open-source Software (FLOSS), it is released under the GPL-3.0 License.
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Yellow CMS: A Tiny PHP CMS for Fast Websites
Yellow CMS or Datenstrom Yellow is a PHP based CMS solution for anyone who want to create a simple small website.
It is easy to be installed either on a local machine or a web server. You can add features, languages, and themes. Datenstrom Yellow works as content management system and static site generator.
Installing is unzipping one file, and you are ready to go. The most important things for small websites are included.
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GPL-2.0 Only.
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What is OpenSearch? | Ubuntu
OpenSearch is an open-source search and analytics suite. Developers build solutions for search, data observability, data ingestion and more using OpenSearch.
Another popular use case is log analytics. You take the logs from applications, servers and network elements, feed them into OpenSearch, and use the rich search and visualisation functionality to identify issues. For example, a malfunctioning web server might throw a 500 error 0.5% of the time, which can be hard to spot unless you have a real-time graph of all the HTTP status codes the server has thrown in the past twenty-four hours. You can use OpenSearch Dashboards to build these kinds of visualisations from data in OpenSearch.
OpenSearch is offered under the Apache Software Licence, version 2.0, which means it’s free, open source software and maintained by the community. OpenSearch and Dashboards were originally derived from Elasticsearch 7.10.2 and Kibana 7.10.2.
Open source projects frequently come with very active communities. OpenSearch has had over 1.4 million downloads and thousands of stars across the 70+ GitHub repositories. There are 19 open-source associated community projects and OpenSearch has nearly 6 thousand stars on GitHub. The OpenSearch project is also listed in the top 5 search engines in DB engine rankings.