You can read about the reasoning here.
Basically using GTK alone became a lot of unenjoyable work for them because they didn’t want to depend on libadwaita and since its something they do for free in their free time it has to be fun.
You can read about the reasoning here.
Basically using GTK alone became a lot of unenjoyable work for them because they didn’t want to depend on libadwaita and since its something they do for free in their free time it has to be fun.


Just once would I like to see a thread about Poettering without people being fucking idiots in the comments. We know literally nothing about this verifiable integrity product and people are already shitting on it. The guy could announce that he developed a cure to cancer and people would still complain about it.


Poor Greg. 😔🪦


The few people I know who had a Windows phone really liked the UI, the platform was just mismanaged by Microsoft. For example, they already had a problem with having too little apps in their store and then they broke app compatibility between Windows phone 7 and 8. I guess Google intentionally breaking compatibility of their services on Windows phones didn’t help adoption either.


If I understand it correctly this just proxies ssh connections through a more efficient type of socket when its a ssh connection between a VM and its Host machine. No SSH daemon is started by systemd by default making this once again misinformation by the anti-systemd crowd.
The EU link contains almost exclusively Linux themed AI slop.
Did they even look at that slop before throwing it on that site?

I am used to the uninformed complaining about Rust but suggesting JAI of all things as an alternative is new.


This is an interesting idea and from the looks of it well executed, but I am having trouble imagining a scenario were I would prefer to use Amber over a scripting language like Python. If your bash scripts are getting long enough to warrant the use of Amber you are probably already in a situation where you can justify installing Python.


“Retarded take”
Your choice of words shows your true colors. You don’t like it when I call out your associates for what they are?


This isn’t purity testing, this is not giving money to fascist fucks who actually want to see me and my family dead.


They openly support fashtech like Hyperland and the “distro” Omarchy. In response to the well-justified backlash against this, founder Nirav Patel tried to hand wave the issue away by talking about how they want “a big tent" for open source”, completely ignoring the nazi cunts behind the projects they support.
If you want to know more details here a two articles:


Cool, but I don’t care how big Framework makes their tent. They will not see a cent from me.


The Pro edition is basically a donate button that gets you a few themes and applications that you can just as easily install from Flathub.
My number one reason for using systemd timers is just that I find it more readable than cron. Usually I want to run things daily, weekly or monthlyand systemd timers make that very easy.
Here is an example:
backup.timer
[Unit]
Description=Run backup database daily
[Timer]
OnCalendar=daily
RandomizedDelaySec=10
[Install]
WantedBy=timers.target
backup.service
[Unit]
Description=Backup database
[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/bin/bash /path/to/backupscript.sh
Another great feature is that the output of the script is logged to journald which is very convenient when you are troubleshooting why your backup failed last night.


Sounds cool but why not link the Trinity announcement directly.
The jump in quality over the last few years is impressive.


I use an alternative to Spotify called “a folder full of mp3s”. If you are into selfhosting you could also stream your collection using Navidrome but putting audio files on your phone works as well. If you need a recommendation algorithm you can sync your listens to listenbrainz.org or lastfm. There are quite a few Linux audio players that support the scrobble API.


I think it is perfectly reasonable to drop some CPU architectures that haven’t been relevant in the last 20 years. It seems to me there are a lot of new people eager to contribute who have no interest in touching C any more than necessary, and a project that can no longer attract new contributors will sooner or later die.
Yes, for the Gnome ecosystem.