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Malicious VS Code AI Extensions Harvesting Code from 1.5M Devs




The world is trying to log off U.S. tech


Countries are growing uneasy about their dependence on U.S. technology firms.


How important is a DE to you?


After 2y on Linux I can say with full confidence that switching from GNOME to KDE (for me) is a bigger barrier than switching from Windows to Linux ever was.

I’ve tried a lot to like KDE but I just can’t. I usually see people discussing distros but I feel like picking the right DE makes much bigger impact.
I’m yet to try Hyprland though.

Considering the fact that I’m itching to get Steam Frame and VR on GNOME will likely be broken indefinitely, idk what to do.

in reply to WereCat

I used to feel the same. At some point I put some time into setting up KDE how I wanted it and then I just kinda kept using it. Still use it today. I do find the editing tools of the toolbars etc to be extremely chaotic. But once that's in place it's actually nicer than Gnome imo
in reply to WereCat

Distro is more an alignment of philosophy between you and the distro. Something slowly updated but really stable? Debian. Something cutting edge, but with lots of guides? Arch, etc. etc.

Any of them can pretty much run any shell, DE or WM, and as that's what you spend the most of the time interacting with, that's a more personal touch point. The distro is really just the package manager that you regularly interact with, and thats easy enough to hide behind something like topgrade.

I have only used Sway for a few years and anything else feels bloated and slow to use to me now. I spent a long time tweaking to get it how I wanted both in terms of add ons and config, then setting the keyboard shortcuts that work for me. I even have a bunch of them configured on my actual keyboard on layers to make them even easier to activate.

Its worth the investment for me as its now transparent to my workflow. I run the same config across all my machines and its been a stable config for the longest time. Long term stability is the key for me.



Apartheid régime reopens Gaza’s Rafah crossing with Egypt for limited passage of residents


https://archive.is/e7ixe




När det gäller politikerna och X samt politiker och alternativa medier är det lätt att konstatera att de flesta politiker är aktiva på X. Få har konton på Bluesky och ännu färre har konton på Mastodon. Enligt en sammanställning som Pierre Mesure gjort har 246 av 351 riksdagsledamöter ett social mediekonto på en mikroblogg.
blog.zaramis.se/2026/02/02/pol…
This entry was edited (1 day ago)


in reply to clumsy_cat

I've taken a look at the website and honestly, I can't make out what the discerning features of that distro are. It's fast and atomic. So are a dozen others. Why did we need one more?
in reply to ISOmorph

They're writing a new package manager/build system and bootloader. So I guess mostly NIH, which is totally fine by me.
This entry was edited (1 day ago)
in reply to ISOmorph

That’s easy; because Ikey Doherty wanted to make one.

He abandoned Solus years ago as the project became something he didn’t enjoy anymore, and wanted to start a fresh project closer to his philosophy of engineering everything.

When a person starts a new project it’s usually because they want to.

So the key here is, in classic Ikey style, they want to use/develop all their own tools. engineer everything themselves to be exactly what they want it to be. This is what suits them and Ikey has the chops to do this better than most.

He started this project about 5 years back as Serpent OS, rebranded it last year as he got to alpha release stages.



The unfair society we live in


[a water pipe is delivering water directly in the mouth of a huge character sitting on a chair, gorging on the water, below a label]\
Evil proletarian getting all the unemployment benefits\
\
[a few little droplets are falling from the water pipe into the mouth of a thin character in a suit, next to the label]\
Poor billionaire trying to buy their 7th yacht

thebad.website/comic/the_unfai…

This entry was edited (1 day ago)
in reply to Bad

Thanks for using this template instead of the one which uses antisemitic imagery - it always hurts seeing the other version depicting the character which looks like he comes straight from an nazi pamphlet (the ugly banker with hooked nose which gets fat while the others starve)
in reply to Wildmimic

If you want to reuse it instead of the antisemitic one, I've uploaded a blank and more neutral version on my templates page ;)



De flesta vänstertidningar har fortfarande konton på X. Det har också jag. Men sen en tid tillbaka postar jag inte längre några länkar till mina blogginlägg på X och väldigt lite annat. Kontot är under avveckling. Dessutom har många vänstertidningar även konton på andra sociala medier som Facebook, Instagram, Bluesky. Mastodon, TikTok med flera.
blog.zaramis.se/2026/02/02/van…


My thousand dollar iPhone can't do math




Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.


According to Statcounter, Windows 11 held a 55.18% market share in October 2025. That share dropped to 53.7% in November and dropped again in December. Now, Windows 11 holds a 50.73% market share.

gs.statcounter.com/os-version-…



French tech company Capgemini to sell its subsidiary working for US ICE amid international controversy over the deaths of two people in ICE operations


This entry was edited (1 day ago)



'Call of Duty' Microtransactions Surge Followed Jeffrey Epstein Advice to CEO


'Call of Duty' players are voicing their distress after stumbling upon specific correspondence in the recently released Epstein Files. Despite the convicted sex offender having no direct public ties to the gaming industry, and famously being banned from Xbox Live, it appears Jeffrey Epstein may have been a vocal proponent of introducing paid content to Activision's flagship franchise.

https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/call-duty-microtransactions-surge-followed-jeffrey-epstein-advice-ceo-1775450



42 years ago, this was state of the art copy protection


reshared this

in reply to DigitalDilemma

Dungeon Master was distributed on a floppy disk that had a specific weak sector that would randomly return 1 or 0 when read. The game would periodically read that sector and, if it returned the same bit x times in a row, it would kill your entire party. When copying the disk, the original would read either 1 or 0 and then write that value in that specific sector, meaning the copy would always return 1 or 0.

The check was random, hidden in graphics files, and this, combined with some obfuscation and some more copy protection, meant it took over a year for the game to get cracked. A record at the time.

The dev claimed that the time and effort spent on the protection scheme was worth it as it allowed the game to keep selling through typical sales channels for much longer than usual.

This entry was edited (1 hour ago)
in reply to DigitalDilemma

All of these oold copy protections were so annoying. Some would just give you a page number from the manual and ask for the fifth word. Some AD&D games came with a decoder wheel with elvish runes n shit (looking at your Pool of Radiance!). At least the decoder wheel was fun to throw around at your friends.
This entry was edited (42 minutes ago)