Yes, exactly - The assumption that FOSS means that there is no financial support is practically archaic. I pay for any software that is useful to me, and many other people do too. There’s donations, perks, exclusive content that subsidizes the core work, there are grants, etc.
Thank you for referencing my list! In case anyone wants some extra info: The frontends for Audire and Audile are open source. Audile uses open source APIs (AudD and ACRCloud)), and Audire uses the proprietary Shazam API.
Note that the clients being FOSS is of little relevance because all they do is forward a recording to a blackbox proprietary service run by a for-profit company.
The code that has access to your audio and does the actual task at hand is not FOSS in the slightest.
Audire
Audile
Found these two apps here: Open Source Everything
They’re free for now because the API they use is in beta… We don’t know if it’ll remain free.
Like most things in life theres no free cpu cycles. They all have a cost somehow
Free software can make money and be sustainable.
So someone is paying - theres allways a cost
Yes, exactly - The assumption that FOSS means that there is no financial support is practically archaic. I pay for any software that is useful to me, and many other people do too. There’s donations, perks, exclusive content that subsidizes the core work, there are grants, etc.
It insists it need to send notifications for it to work. I get it needs the microphone, but it won’t work without notification permissions.
I don’t get this at all
The notification stays on in the background and allows you to tap it whenever you need an instant recognition…
Thank you for referencing my list! In case anyone wants some extra info: The frontends for Audire and Audile are open source. Audile uses open source APIs (AudD and ACRCloud)), and Audire uses the proprietary Shazam API.
Note that the clients being FOSS is of little relevance because all they do is forward a recording to a blackbox proprietary service run by a for-profit company.
The code that has access to your audio and does the actual task at hand is not FOSS in the slightest.
Seconding Audile, it’s great