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Pedro Sánchez, in Strasbourg: "Europe has everything it needs to remain one of the most prosperous and socially advanced regions in the world"




The day a nuclear Iran was born




US, Israel move to block UN effort to shut down Gaza Humanitarian Foundation


The United States and Israel are working behind the scenes to block a United Nations and European-led initiative aimed at dismantling the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), Ynet learned Sunday. The initiative came after a closed session of the UN Security Council held on Friday, after which the UN reportedly instructed its agencies and affiliated organizations to cease all cooperation with the foundation.

“Some organizations are threatening not to cooperate with the foundation and are spreading lies about indiscriminate fire and drug distribution, all to derail this initiative. If this were going through UN channels, which have shown support for Hamas, it would be embraced quietly. This isn’t about concern for Gaza—it’s pure double standards,” he also said.

in reply to geneva_convenience

The Evangelical Christian leader of this group was on BBC World Report (via NPR) the other day, and I was absolutely disgusted by what he had to say. The BBC reporter did push back a little bit, but not nearly enough.
This entry was edited (7 months ago)



Do What You Love


in reply to zomia

Hopefully you love enough different things that you can do some of them for work, and some of them as hobbies.
in reply to zomia

I see attribution to Marc Anthony


It was around long, long before Marc Anthony. Also, you are being way too cynical. It's really just saying that if ya can, you should try to make a living out of something you are passionate about.

Yes, there are people who love what they do for a living so much, that they never wanna quit doing it. I am one of them. I own my own company.

Think of musicians, or actors. Some of them legit love what they are doing and never wanna stop doing it. My grandfather owned an Antique store. His entire life was that store and even when he was in the hospital, he was trying to get back to his Antique shop ASAP. My father was same way. And it's probably why I own my own company.

This entry was edited (7 months ago)

in reply to zomia

Good I didn't choose bcachefs
in reply to Mwa

It's an interesting filesystem, but you shouldn't use it at this point unless you know what the hell you're doing. You'll need to be able to notice, report and help resolve bugs, and under no circumstances use it for production or where you can't afford to lose some or all of the data on the partition.
in reply to zomia

Anyone else here actively put off by Linux drama and headlines like "Torvalds Drops support After Clash!"

EDIT: New rule?

This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to James R Kirk

This is a non-issue, being over-reported by people looking for clicks. A minor technical matter being handled by the person ultimately responsible for handling such things
in reply to MartianSands

Yeah for sure there's ton of clickbait, but this isn't "a minor technical matter". The news here isn't the clash over whether the patch should be accepted in the RC branch, but the fact that Linus said he wants to remove bcachefs from the kernel tree.
in reply to patatahooligan

An experimental capability being kicked out of the kernel, so that it has to settle for being a kernel module or custom forks of the kernel, is absolutely a minor matter
in reply to MartianSands

Filesystems are incredibly antiquated, and while I don't agree with Kent's attitude, it is very important in the long run that filesystems catch back up.

As it stands just about any enterprise system you can poke a stick at is rolling their own customised file storage system, with a traditional filesystem typically being a misshapen dead weight sitting somewhere in the middle of it - existing because it's the only thing the kernel can integrate with.

It is pretty important that this trend reverses, and bcachefs was a big step in the right direction. Unfortunate that Kent is the way he is.

in reply to James R Kirk

I'm really glad Torvalds is the kind of person to flip articles like this off and carry on with his day and just not be affected by it at all. When the time comes, I hope whoever carries the torch is just as well.
in reply to Dae

That's a good point, I have no doubt Linux would not be in the position it is if he were more sensitive to it.
in reply to James R Kirk

At the very least, it would be far more of a circus, as the follow-up articles would read "LINUX KERNEL CREATOR LINUS TORVALDS MAKES DEVESTATING REPLY TO FOSS DRAMA!"

But yeah, I think shit like that would just make devs want to go work for a company, because at least when they make a shitty closed sourced, exploitive program people are mad at the company, not them, specifically. They don't have to deal with this shit.

in reply to James R Kirk

I don't see any drama. It's just people working together, having different priorities yet still getting things done. Some friction is to be expected.
in reply to James R Kirk

Ok, my mistake. I didn't express myself correctly. I wasn't referring to the article but to the communication between developers.
This entry was edited (7 months ago)


Which hedge fund owns this sea?


Critical aid and support to the people of Gaza—only translatable as this is yet another way we will annihilate you. Johnnie Moore is an Evangelical leader who began his career as Senior Vice President for Communications for Liberty University—the private Evangelical school founded by Jerry Falwell Sr. [https://electronicintifada.net/content/father-christian-zionism-leaves-building/6923] and went on to found the Kairo Company, a public relations firm based in Glendale, California. The group insists: We get the job done… Whatever it takes. If we’re harping on words, a pause for Kairos’ stated approach:


in reply to zomia

Btw, i have a USB-C DAC that has it's comfortable level on 5%. Any way to change that and increase fidelity of audio steps?
in reply to MonkderVierte

Its your DE that controls the volume steps, if that's what you're asking. On Ubuntu its shift + volume.
in reply to MonkderVierte

in reply to Übercomplicated

Ah, no, it's iFi Audio Go Blue and a 3More Triple something in-ear connected via jack. It has Bluetooth, but via USB sounds better.
This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to zomia

RAOP stands for Remote Audio Output Protocol and is the key to enabling Airplay on Linux


medium.com/@ed.sav/enabling-ai…



GUI/App to automate key presses in linux wayland


There is xclicker which is a flatpak app, but it only automate mouse clicks, but there is nothing for key presses, I am surprised I could not find anything on this, but is there any GUI for this? Also is this possible on a technical level (in flatpak especially, I dont know if apps can simulate key presses). I know of ydotool, but that uses root, also its not a gui
in reply to SpiderUnderUrBed

Dunno if it would meet your needs, but I've been using Input Remapper for binding macros to various key presses and mouse buttons under Wayland. It does prompt for root access, but it's a GUI. It supports any input method, as far as I can tell. It even supports my tablet.

I use it to bind stuff like hold(key(BTN_LEFT).wait(100)) to some button to repeatedly left click while I'm holding that button down.

This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to SpiderUnderUrBed

It's not GUI, but I want to mention another alternative, as people mention commandline applications here too: kdotool, works under KDE Wayland without with normal user rights (no root). They still work on a few features, but it can do lot of windowing stuff already. A good addition to ydotool.


Bad issues with system load on Mint Desktop


This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to jherazob

I wish you the best of luck at/with whatever you end up doing! May your system be protected from bit rot, config drift and/or problems caused by hidden state!


GE-Proton10-6 and GE-Proton10-7 Released


in reply to CannonGoBoom

I installed that today. Finally! Years after GE release, I managed to install it with the help of an AI bc nobody explains anything properly, except for the AI.
Hopefully with GE I'll stop seeing 130 GB log files from Forza 5. 😂

in reply to swordfish

The main NATO member countries are backing Israel, with money, weaponry, and promises of defense. This happened when the US invaded Iraq also.
in reply to Dessalines

Yes, but individual countries supporting Israel by eiter finance, ammo or just providing Air defense doesn't make this a NATO operation just because they are in NATO.

don't like this

in reply to swordfish

in reply to swordfish

every single country in that T-word organization (I leave figuring out what the "T" word is as an exercise for the reader) provides material support, whether directly or indirectly, to the settler-colonial entity.
in reply to Samsuma

1) it is not true that every single county does that
2) the ones that do, do it as individual states. Same as backing Ukraine is the decision of every individual state rather than a NATO project
3) NATO is not a Tennis Organization. :-)
in reply to swordfish

This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to Samsuma

Well if you count decades old recognition of a state as a support of what is going currently in Gaza, i will not spend time to find any examples because on that premise you would be factually correct, but your premise is wrong. Past recognition of a state does not automatically mean support for its actions, which you seem to imply.

Coopertation on anything else with NATO not really adressing the point, as we are discussing the situation in Gaza specifically, not Israels ties with NATO in general.

in reply to swordfish

This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to Samsuma

Redditors?

About diplomacy 101
My country has diplomatic relations with russia for example. We do however not cooperate in most aspects. In fact we are on the list of their enemies.

My country also has diplomatic ties with israel. And we do cooperate. Mostly in education. My country is also a NATO member without a single US soldier or base present. Also opposed to current Gaza events.

Vermin psycho state is a bit too much for me. I'd just stop the discussion here.

in reply to swordfish

Am I supposed to know where "my country" is? Whatever, doesn't matter, we now learn that you don't really consider Palestinians humans, so good talk.

in reply to Melvin_Ferd

This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to Melvin_Ferd

I'm not sure why the downvote. This is a valid point, but it's also their fault when they know other options exist. I can't be blamed for choosing to exit a toxic atmosphere just because nobody else will, even after being told.

in reply to Bot R1

Are you ready to make this interesting? Because I know who I am betting on


Ukraine's Withdrawal From Anti-Personnel Landmine Treaty Could Haunt Generations


in reply to jackeroni

It doesn't actually matter, because both Ukraine and Russia have already been heavily mining the frontlines for 3 years.
This entry was edited (7 months ago)


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

China has already caught up. They made a better model than US companies ever could, because they are self hostable


9950x3d cache optimizations on Linux?


in reply to Comexs

If it helps, I wrote a KDE widget to switch between the modes: github.com/Steve-Tech/KDE-AMD-…

Screenshot of the KDE X3D Mode widget

My understanding is amd_x3d_mode basically prioritises what cores the scheduler will assign tasks to.
I usually keep it on cache since I do a lot of code compilation, but I will usually switch it to frequency for gaming and stuff.

in reply to SteveTech

keep it on cache since I do a lot of code compilation, but I will usually switch it to frequency for gaming and stuff.


Isn't gaming the most cache-heavy CPU workload there is? The X3D CPUs have consistently topped gaming benchmarks, even outperforming much more modern CPUs that lack 3D cache.

I'd sooner do it the other way around: frequency for compiling, rendering, transcoding, etc. Cache for gaming!

This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to F04118F

Oh okay, I had assumed compiling would be a bit more I/O bound, while gaming would be a bit more CPU bound, but I guess you're right about the benchmarks!

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Do they also Roll on the ground as soon as you touch them and Fake injuries?

Because if not, I may be more interested on watching that...



Advice on migrating from Ubuntu server to another server OS


in reply to kboy101222

If you want to use it as a server, Fedora is annoying because the support lifetimes are so short.

If you want the Fedora / Red Hat experience, consider Alma Linux. Skills wise, it is like using Res Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) which is an in-demand skill set.

in reply to kboy101222

For a server os, do things like consider stability and ease of upgrading between major versions.

Debian does both of those things extremely well.

If you're playing around with changing distros and your data is valuable, I'd try and find somewhere to back it up to, myself.

This entry was edited (7 months ago)