FOSS Weekly #25.48: Backup Flatpaks and Snaps, Arduino's Troubled Future, New Office, Popular Linux Apps Reborn and More

Happy Thanksgiving
Warp Terminal

Happy Thanksgiving 🦃

I’m incredibly thankful for this community. To our Plus members who support us financially, and to our free members who amplify our work by sharing it with the world — you all mean a lot to us. Your belief in what we do has kept us going for 13 amazing years.

This Thanksgiving, let’s also extend our gratitude beyond our personal circles to the open-source contributors whose work silently powers our servers, desktops, and daily digital lives. From code to distributions to documentation, their relentless effort keeps the Linux world alive 🙏

Here's the highlight of this edition of FOSS Weekly:

  • Zorin OS upgrade tool.
  • Arduino's future looking precarious.
  • Dell prioritizing Linux with its recent launch.
  • Backing up Flatpak and Snap applications.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!

Thanksgiving is also associated with offers, deals and shopping. Like every year, I have curated a list of deals and offers that may interest you as a Linux user. See if there is something that you need (or want).

Black Friday Deals for Linux Users 2025 [Continually Updated With New Entries]
Save big on cloud storage, privacy tools, VPN services, courses, and Linux hardware.

There is also a wholesome deal that will deliver fresh cranberry sauce to your doorstep while supporting keystone open source maintainers.

📰 Linux and Open Source News

Collabora has relaunched desktop office suite. Which is basically LibreOffice under the core but with a more modern and fresh user interface.

Collabora Launches Desktop Office Suite for Linux
The new office suite uses modern tech for a consistent online-offline experience; the existing offering is renamed ‘Classic’ and it maintains a traditional approach.

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

Arduino's enshittification might've begun as Qualcomm carries out some massive policy changes.

Enshittification of Arduino Begins? Qualcomm Starts Clamping Down
New Terms of Service introduce perpetual content licenses, reverse-engineering bans, and widespread data collection.

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

You can backup and restore your Flatpak and Snap apps and settings between distro hops.

Backup and Restore Your Flatpak Apps & Settings
Make a backup of your Flatpak apps and application data and restore them to a new Linux system where Flatpak is supported.
Move Between the Distros: Back Up and Restore Your Snap Packages
Make a backup of your Snap apps and application data and restore them to a new Linux system where Snap is supported. Works between Ubuntu and non-Ubuntu distros, too.

The Zorin OS developers have given early access to the upgrade path from Zorin OS 17 to 18.

And check out this list of OG applications that were reborn as NG apps.

Open Source Never Dies: 11 of My Favorite Linux Apps That Refused to Stay Dead
These Linux apps were popular once. And then they were abandoned. And then they came back with a new generation tag.

Linux runs the world’s servers, but on desktops, it’s still fighting for attention.
That’s why It’s FOSS exists; to make Linux easier, friendlier, and more approachable for everyday users.

We’re funded not by VCs, but by readers like you. This Thanksgiving, we’re grateful for your trust and your support.

If you believe in our work, if we ever helped you, do consider upgrading to an It’s FOSS Plus membership — just $3/month or a single payment of $99 for lifetime access.

Help us stay independent, stay human in the age of AI slop and more importantly.

Join It's FOSS Plus

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

Don't neglect your homelab. Manage it effectively with these dashboard tools.

9 Dashboard Tools to Manage Your Homelab Effectively
See which server is running what services with the help of a dashboard tool for your homelab.

🛍️ Linux eBook bundle

This curated library (partner link) of courses includes Supercomputers for Linux SysAdmins, CompTIA Linux+ Certification Companion, Using and Administering Linux: Volumes 1–2, and more. Plus, your purchase supports the Room to Read initiative!

✨ Project Highlights

A return from the dead? These open source apps sure did.

Open Source Never Dies: 11 of My Favorite Linux Apps That Refused to Stay Dead
These Linux apps were popular once. And then they were abandoned. And then they came back with a new generation tag.

📽️ Videos I Am Creating for You

In the latest video, I share how I customize and set up my Firefox browser.

💡 Quick Handy Tip

In Nautilus file manager, you can select files according to certain pre-set conditions.

To do that, first press CTRL+S and enter the relevant patterns you want to sort by. This will then make Nautilus select files or directories based on the given pattern.

You can press CTRL+SHIFT+I to revert the selection as well.

PS: The tip was tested using Nautilus, but other file managers should also have such functionality; only the shortcuts will vary.

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

Test your skills by reviewing Fedora's interesting history in this quick quiz.

The Fedora Side of Linux: Quiz
Fedora has an interesting history. Take this quiz to find out a little more about it.

🤣 Meme of the Week: Step aside mortals, your god is here.

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On November 24, 1998, America Online announced it would acquire Netscape Communications in a stock-for-stock deal valued at $4.2 billion, a move that signaled the shifting balance of power in the browser wars and highlighted the rapid consolidation occurring during the late-1990s Internet boom.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: Long-time FOSSer Ernest has posted an interesting thread on obscure Linux distributions.

Obscure GNU/Linux Distributions that May Interest You
In the ZDNET Tech Today newsletter that came into my inbox today, there’s an item that interested me, and I immediately thought about all my fellow !T’S FOSS’ers! You can read the item for yourself here, but one distribution in particular caught my attention, because it offers only open source software throughout, and it eschews systemd, and instead offers several other init systems users can choose from, including OpenRC, Runit, s6, and SysV (list copied directly from the article), which brough…

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Enjoy FOSS 😄

About the author
Abhishek Prakash

Abhishek Prakash

Created It's FOSS 13 years ago to share my Linux adventures. Have a Master's degree in Engineering and years of IT industry experience. Huge fan of Agatha Christie detective mysteries 🕵️‍♂️

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