Open, for business.

Open source software is a parody of capitalism.

That’s why it’s promoted (or even made fun of) way less often* in 2026 than it was when 2006, when I began paying attention to the software industry (*by commercial sources at least … my jokes, personally, didn’t always land back then either, so it’s not a fair comparison).

And that’s why we need it more than ever.

0g.software, a figment of DARK SUPPLIES LLC, exists to build software for me (Graham, you can call me 0GS or Graham or whatever) to use and, as much as possible, release it under permissive open source licenses for others to take, use, remix, and even charge for as they see fit.

Already built for 2026, and woefully under-documented for numerous* reasons including I’m sorry, are some web-based transform tools and a “virtual bureaucratic movie and animation studio of specialists” released under the GPL-2 license and improving every day (*they’re kind of too powerful to be free web demo apps but so be it. I’ll let you know if you hurt my credits). There’s large, big additional things in the offing too.

First up: “HUGE BIG BAND,” the inaugural release from Open Source Jam Band Software ; see “jam band” in the nav options, aka jamband.net.

Each release will be documented here, but not in a “look at this funny ad copy” way or even a straight-faced “I am trying to eventually make money off of this product” way.

Because I’m not.

And besides: open source software is funny in any economic context, just by being itself.