Well, there’s REISUB https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_SysRq_key
Well, there’s REISUB https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_SysRq_key
Definitely the transition from QT5 to QT6. It Looks identical, but has better wayland support and performance.
There are also a few new and hot features which I can’t recount at the moment (it’s 4:30 in the morning), but the pointieststick blog should have the droids you’re searching for
Niceeeee! I’ve tested a few KF6 apps in a rawhide+nightly copr distrobox on Kinoite, and they’re quick
Aren’t most of those at best vulnerable as a leaf in the wind; and at worst literal hacker gateways to your home?
To my knowledge there’s less overhead to running graphical applications through flatpak.
Source: a small test I did months ago
You can download configuration files (wireguard preferably) from your protonvpn account in a web browser.
Open the network manager (idk what steam mode uses, this should work in desktop mode) and add a wireguard connection.
Add the private key, add the peer and its public key, add the dns. Save.
When you need it, simply connect to it like a regular network, in addition to your wifi of course.
This has served me well on Fedora Atomic workstation with KDE for years :)
I’ve also used a pinetime running infinitime for the past year, and I agree that it’s not exactly feature rich. I like it though.
I’ve heard that ‘bangle.js’ is an open source watch as well, with a decent feature set.
Great post! I’ve often used low cost as an argument for choosing open source software in my [IRL] communities, as the other advantages aren’t that successful when talking to people on a personal level. This post elaborates on those other advantages in a convincing way.
I look forward to open-ness crushing proprietary alternatives in the maritime, hiking, and landbased transportation segments.
Wayland support, would you look at that!
Was it rustdesk or some other popular open source remote desktop software that had “no plans of supporting wayland”? In any case, nice!
DepYou could attempt the non-selfish kind and just donate it all to an independent health/rescue org like Red Cross/Red Crescent.
You could also go the kinda-selfish route like Alfred Nobel, known in his time as the merchant of death. Make an elaborate award&grant giving scheme for exceptional contributions to society in a variety of fields; boosting said contributions for many years. Would only recommend this route if you’ve got more than enough coin to spare, as the overhead of ensuring ethical operation is significant.
If you’ve got a house, you could transfer ownership to a trust/foundation/housing coop, to make it available for living at below market price.
I’d donate to various free software & open hardware projects important to societal improvement; like Mozilla, certain fediverse projects, PostmarketOS, Fairphone, etc. Also anarchist orgs.