I guess we could start from these but there are so many more.. internet is incredibly dense of information and record of old conferences (which for historical purposes can be very interesting imo) https://fosstodon.org/@fosdem https://youtube.com/@bsdconferences/videos (currently 237 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/@linuxconfau2011/videos (currently 165 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/@BsdcanOrg/videos (currently 261 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/@linuxconfau2017/videos (currently 169 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLqJap3FMiIH-Nq7NcRJJYIg9opog9fsES (currently 35 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLb87fdKUIo8SornpEq9tQwS39VCvdi62H (currently 13 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLb87fdKUIo8TijlK7TuBeRMgylGaN9Ec9 (currently 12 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLb87fdKUIo8SsgOtgZqfixbynhtkAU_b1 (currently 7 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLb87fdKUIo8TAMC2HJLZ7H54edD2BeGWv (currently 10 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLb87fdKUIo8TNG6f94xo9_W-XXrEbqgWI (currently 4 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLb87fdKUIo8Q41aoPE6vssP-uF4dxk86b (currently 9 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/@FreeBSDProject/videos (currently 188 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUW3LUwQvegyqk2Iqi-YD7Do-AyD4W0s1 (currently 349 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/@EuroBSDcon/videos (currently 238 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/@EuroBSDCon-mx3xo/videos (currently 46 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbET-7keUM8qdq16cDrx-dw2SVXBLH4hk (currently 109 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/@UKNOFconf/videos (currently 512 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/@openevents/videos (currently 391 videos as of the time I post this) https://youtube.com/@mediacccde/videos (currently 4.9K videos as of the time I post this - not all Libre related, but mostly)
DerpyT
Thanks, I didn't catch on that. I appreciate you informing it!
Apparently there's a guide on Termux's official wiki on how to download and use TeX Live from Termux, which is great for anyone already using Termux but I'd prefer not to since that would be the only reason for me to use it and give too many permissions for the app. Thanks for the suggestion though!
Don't you need to give Termux too many permissions (for obvious reasons and well justified sincd it's a terminal emulator)? That's the only thing keeping me away from Termux, I'm not very familiar with it and I don't feel comfortable going ahead onto an app like that since I'd use it exclusively for this purpose. Thanks for the suggestion though (I didn't know you could run vim/nano from there, interesting, by the way). For anyone reading this and don't think this way I do and want to give it a try, here are some Termux official webpages:
Wow, I've never heard of it but it looks interestig thanks! For anyone reading this, here's some links:
Apparently I also found someone made a mobile app editor for Typst, but it's in another app store called Accrescent (I don't know if it's safe? I will do some searches on it to get to know about) The project BeauTyXT official website, GitHub Repository (.apk available on Releases page)
Thanks, from LaTeX website, they inform of OverLeaf (not FOSS) more like freemium web app? It works nicely though, Papeeria - also same as OverLeaf in terms of FOSS, and CoCalc which I'm very unfamiliar with and it's different from the first two but also not FOSS webapp. I wish there were apps because I don't even know if there are self-hosteable TeX live equivalent so I could use it without relying on an online service
TeX is a typesetting language. Instead of visually formatting your text, you enter your manuscript text intertwined with TeX commands in a plain text file. You then run TeX to produce formatted output, such as a PDF file. Thus, in contrast to standard word processors, your document is a separate file that does not pretend to be a representation of the final typeset output, and so can be easily edited and manipulated.
More info on LaTeX
Aww, that's a pity that the fossdroid one is no longer available, I couldn't find any in regards to general FOSS apps regardless of which app store you have, but I'll give the fdroid a try, thanks!
Friendica is also nice and looks like 2008ish Twitter but not so full, sadly. For reference if anyone interested: