If you're up for pgp and git, gnu password store is a killer app. There are a few guis, including Android and iOS, and if you use gopass there's a nice plugin for browsers as well. And it's ultimately just two tools that are both solid and generally well known.
"Come here young pillowcases, young sheets! Shelter yourselves from the storm inside my waterproof arms and I shall keep you dry and help you keep your hard-earned coating of dirt and saliva from washing away."
Having used sync for like 10 years I think that's been my general experience. It's always just worked and every once in a while a bucket of new features or a bomb redesign will drop and I'm like "oh hey, I didn't need that but I like it!"
Lemmy will add a new breaking change, ljdawson will swoop in and fix it in a day along with 10 cool features nobody thought of and then disappear into the night again as mysteriously as he appeared. Tbh I don't need much more than sync offers so I'm fine with radio silence as long as nothing's broken or dangerous.
I mean, that's exactly the same set of problems faced by closed source software. I guess one potential difference is that you can hire new devs to take over if it's successful enough. But both crappy documentation and team burnout have killed lots and lots of internal projects at places I've worked.
It's probably a whole set of bots and the responses to "this needs to be a coffee mug" are some other account saying "I found one!" and that's the whole point of the comment chain. Someone has a crappy mug to sell and constructs scenarios that seem natural ish to introduce it.
They'll have to go through several sessions of top tier therapy to feel better about their bad decisions. Is that bad feeling not consequence enough?!?
For camera software, zoneminder is a classic, and frigate is probably the new kid in town. Web hosting will depend on your web developers but docker will have you covered for almost anything. Probably just steer clear of asp.net dev shops.
Worth mentioning they offer PPF on all their vehicles. It's not a cyber truck exclusive money grab. Though the lack of a clear coat is a questionable choice for sure.
If you're up for pgp and git, gnu password store is a killer app. There are a few guis, including Android and iOS, and if you use gopass there's a nice plugin for browsers as well. And it's ultimately just two tools that are both solid and generally well known.