

Sorry, its, its, its
Simple test, replace it like this: their competition, their customers or their employees


Sorry, its, its, its
Simple test, replace it like this: their competition, their customers or their employees
Kröhnkite works well. I’m using it with KDE 6 on plasma no issues.
I just tested a bunch of windows and none of them went floating, not sure about manual resizing though.
GNOME and KDE have large philosophical differences and those show when you use them. I really like KDE and the way I can turn it into a tiling window manager.
Comparing a full DE to a WM is a massive difference. DEs have batteries included, you don’t need to worry about which notification daemon to use, which tool can do power management or what renders your task bar. You just get every tool and it works.
I used to use i3, then migrated to sway, but the finding of tools that do X or Y got annoying after a while. In KDE everything just works together with no or minimal configuration and I get more features more easily.


Arguably still an organisation & governance issue, but this doesn’t sound great for that dude


Sound like the typical “newish and relatively small project that hasn’t figured out their organisational structure yet” problem


Yeah, I thought so to. I’ll definitely try that


Lol, reported for the URL “blog”
Arch if you want to do the install completely by yourself and/or have some setup that can’t be replicated by the usual installers.
EndeavourOS/Cachy if you want a simple GUI installer for Arch, but you don’t get bragging rights.
Don’t use Manjaro


The publishers aren’t indie, but they publish lots of indie games. Assuming you define indie as not big established studio instead of how they are published.
I’m calling the bubble burst for a few weeks after the first large AI company has to go public due to being unable to finance their money burning scheme.


I’m always annoyed at the “AirDrop alternative” marketing. It’s not. It requires both of your devices to share a network.
The truest AirDrop alternative that uses discovery and ad-hoc connections between devices is FlyingCarpet. It definitely needs a simpler UI though.


I have a few qualms with this app:
1. For a Linux user, you can already build such a system yourself quite trivially by getting an FTP account, mounting it locally with curlftpfs, and then using SVN or CVS on the mounted filesystem. From Windows or Mac, this FTP account could be accessed through built-in software.
Maybe that’s a hot take, but OnePlus fell off after the 3t. Every later phone was just a high-midrange phone with a high-midrange price.
The 3(t) had a great custom rom, kernel, etc community.


The Pinephone used way underpowered hardware when it came out.
Regardless, there’s been a lot of progress from postmarketOS and others the past years and especially accelerated once again with the original announcement to kill installing apps outside of the PlayStore.
I’ve also gone ahead and put in a reservation for the new Jolla phone to support another alternative.


Thanks, I didn’t know about music map. I have used Everynoise, which is similar, but doesn’t get updates anymore since Spotify closed that particular API access.


What’s a good way to discover artists on Bandcamp? Most artists I listen to at the moment are with the usual big labels and don’t sell on Bandcamp.


It’s been years since they last promised a Linux client.


Be careful with that. Home Assistant also has plenty of integrations that just talk to a company’s cloud service.


The distinction is important. Using AI tools implies you check and verify the output. Vibecoding is not doing that or having no idea what is happening.
XKCD 2501