Den 14 juli i år hittades två döda män i en utbrunnen bli i ett industriområde i Fosie, Malmö. Efter en tid kunde de två männen identifieras som britter på besök i Malmö. Nu har en 19-åring häktats som misstänkt för medhjälp till mord för inblandning i dubbelmordet.
blog.zaramis.se/2024/08/31/19-…
19-åring häktad för dubbelmord på britter - Svenssons Nyheter
19-åring häktad för dubbelmord. Den 14 juli i år hittades två döda män i en utbrunnen bli i ett industriområde i Fosie, Malmö. Efter en tidAnders_S (Svenssons Nyheter)
Remember Cutefish? Pretty sure it's dead
CutefishOS Reborn
Download CutefishOS Reborn for free. Make a better Desktop OS Focus on simplicity, beauty and practicality. Cutefish OS is an elegant, beautiful and easy-to-use Linux desktop operating system.SourceForge
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zmk-rgbled-widget: A ZMK module to add battery & BT indicators using an RGB LED (like in Xiao BLEs)
I find that having a way to check the battery and connection status is very useful with wireless devices. Traditionally, the way to do this is through the addition of a display. However I always thought displays were a bit overkill for that and once I started using Xiao BLE controllers I noticed that they have an RGB LED built onto the controller itself that can be programmed.
So I wrote a small tool to indicate the battery and BT profile status that uses that LED, and I thought I'd share more broadly in case it is useful to others. It's pretty easy to add to your ZMK build as documented in the README as it is a ZMK module.
While it supports Seeeduino Xiao BLE out of the box, it's also easy to add support for it if you have a custom keyboard that has three dumb LEDs for RGB colors.
GitHub - caksoylar/zmk-rgbled-widget: A ZMK module to add battery & BT indicators using an RGB LED (like in Xiao BLEs)
A ZMK module to add battery & BT indicators using an RGB LED (like in Xiao BLEs) - caksoylar/zmk-rgbled-widgetGitHub
Nice! It was essentially my first Zephyr project and I tried to make it accessible code-wise, so I am happy you found it useful in that regard.
I know at least a couple other people that adapted it to a single LED. I’d probably do it too if I needed it but I’d find it difficult to share it with others given that decoding the information is harder for others.
Kalle Sundin är en ny ledarskribent i Aftonbladet. Han har skrivit en ledare om att justitieminister Gunnar Strömmer borde läsa kriminologi. Det har han helt rätt i. Men även Kalle Sundin borde läsa kriminologi.
I imagine it runs much more nicely than UTM SE on iOS. I was never able to get UTM JIT to work.
Honestly, I want to jump ship from Apple, but I'm not in a position to do so at this time.
This week in Plasma: inhibiting inhibitions and more!
This week in Plasma: inhibiting inhibitions and more!
This is a big one, folks. Plasma 6.2’s soft feature freeze is now in effect, which means the last few features have just been merged! Now we’ll have six weeks of heavy bug-fixing before…Adventures in Linux and KDE
Brainf...
some brainfuck fluff
Includes a complete language reference, plus my many brainfuck programs and some implementations and commentary.brainfuck.org
"Let scaling-aware Xwayland clients scale themselves..." merged in Gnome
Let scaling-aware Xwayland clients scale themselves with "scale-monitor-framebuffers" (!3567) · Merge requests · GNOME / mutter · GitLab
Based on this branch from Jonas Ådahl, main commit: Apply custom scaling to...GitLab
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You're talking about extensions.
Extensions that don't come from GNOME are not supported at all, they've made that clear. If they wanted to, they could just stop allowing third party extensions altogether.
This is because they hook directly into GNOME Shell's' internal JS, which changes every release as they refactor it for performance or feature changes. Developers have a few months before release to adjust their extensions for the newer version.
Personally, I just raw dog vanilla GNOME for stability, and it works fine.
We've had this on KDE for a year or two now, and it's mostly been great.
It won't mean no more blurry apps unfortunately, but games will render at the correct resolution and some xwayland apps will look a lot better.
The coolest new space pictures: August 2024
The coolest new space pictures: August 2024
The Juice spacecraft accomplished a historic “double” gravity assist and took photos to prove it.The Planetary Society
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Researchers Map 50,000 of DNA’s Mysterious ‘Knots’ in the Human Genome
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I've spent a good amount of time studying various DNA processes and never once made a connection between i-motifs and clippy. Great catch! lol
The thing is, our cells create these "knots" to make room for enzymes to access our DNA. They're quite common as it's required for DNA transcription + replication, chromosome segregation in cell division, telomere maintenance, and to alter gene expression. Not sure how I overlooked what happens if they form more often than intended. Wild to learn it can lead to cancer, neurodegeneration, and heart disorders! Guess I missed two massive aspects when studying all this, the imapct of DNA forming i-motifs too often, and the resemblance to clippy hahaha.
Come venivano dal regime fascista strumentalizzati i fumetti...
Grottesco anche il caso di Dick Fulmine, di matita italiana, personaggio italo-americano operante dapprima negli USA, ma che nel luglio 1942 si trova nella fantasia di queste pubblicazioni non si sa come a combattere a fianco delle Forze dell'Asse.
Aggiungo una copertina, quella di "Albo dell'Intrepido" del 23 maggio 1942, perché nella nuova versione degli anni '50 era uno dei miei giornalini preferiti.
Alcuni fumetti continuarono ad essere pubblicati, altri vennero recuperati dopo le censure del fascismo, nuovi ne emersero, più di settant'anni fa...
LWN report about the "Rust for filesystems" session which a Rust for Linux maintainer referred to for context when retiring from the project this week
Their resignation is already being discussed in another post here from yesterday: One Of The Rust Linux Kernel Maintainers Steps Down - Cites "Nontechnical Nonsense"
...but I think this LWN reporting (from back in June) deserves its own post as it makes it easier for those of us who are not kernel hackers to follow what is going on.
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It's an interesting read to see how Kernel developers argue and think.
It's an important goal to adjust to how kernel devs discuss kernel issues.
Please don't trivialize the efforts of a smart person in a very underestimated discipline.
It's an interesting read to see how Kernel developers argue and think.
You sound like some mad scientist experimenting with kernel devs.
Large organizations always have politics—it's human nature. 1700 people is quite a large organization. Therefore, the kernel maintainers have politics. The presence of politics always means that some people will get stomped on unfairly.
This is all business as usual, in other words, and it will not go away. At best, you can shift the culture of the group and the politics along with it, but that takes time and effort and people-handling.
Academics on Mastodon
Academics on Mastodon
A list of various lists consisting of academics on Mastodonacademics-on-mastodon
electricprism
in reply to daggermoon • • •Is it me or is source forge just the mark of dead things.
I always avoid that place. It feels like where you go to get broken stuff.
They're gonna take me out back and shoot me for saying it but Launchpad too. Like I'm glad it works for you but it feels like when Debian had a website in 2015 that looked like 1997. How are we going to attract new talent when the rift between the average developers and the old guard widens over time. All the git VCS modernization supercharged development. Like bugzilla was "fine", but " fine" was the problem in a world of better when you couldn't even upload a > 250kb jpeg and other legacy hold us back stuff.
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wagesj45, massive_bereavement, timlyo and TVA like this.
31337
in reply to electricprism • • •like this
timlyo and TVA like this.
leo85811nardo
in reply to 31337 • • •RegalPotoo
in reply to electricprism • • •like this
TVA likes this.
Bobby Turkalino
in reply to RegalPotoo • • •like this
TVA likes this.
N0x0n
in reply to RegalPotoo • • •JustEnoughDucks
in reply to N0x0n • • •mexicancartel
in reply to N0x0n • • •corsicanguppy
in reply to N0x0n • • •hjjanger
in reply to RegalPotoo • • •dblsaiko
in reply to electricprism • • •like this
kbal likes this.
DigitalDilemma
in reply to electricprism • • •Agree - after they started bundling adware in downloads (2013ish?), all the decent projects seemed to move to github en masse.
Those projects that stayed were mostly already stagnant, or the maintainers didn't use git and didn't want to learn, or had some other reason that allowed them to accept advertising on their work.
SourceForge is now bundling adware without dev permission - Official forums for BZFlag.org
forums.bzflag.orgGenderNeutralBro
in reply to DigitalDilemma • • •curbstickle
in reply to electricprism • • •As a Debian user... Its the same in 2024.
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0x0
in reply to curbstickle • • •curbstickle
in reply to 0x0 • • •Oh I'm not complaining. Its quick and simple to navigate. I don't need flash, I need function.
I wouldn't mind updates with that aspect kept in mind, but I'm not going to complain about it either. I think more websites could use debian.org as an example.
linearchaos
in reply to curbstickle • • •leisesprecher
in reply to electricprism • • •And that's especially true for Linux and other big projects.
I'm not a kernel or C developer by any stretch, but a few years ago fixed a small bug that caused my knockoff PS2 controllers to act super weird. Nothing serious, something like one constant and maybe 5 lines of code. Would have gladly pushed that upstream, but fuck me sideways is that a complicated process. Patches via email??? And the argument is always "but it works for us", yeah burning witches and slavery also work for some people, doesn't mean it's something to continue doing.
If there isn't a serious revamp, Linux will die a slow death or become just a corporate graveyard product like Cobol.
Aatube
in reply to electricprism • • •cutefish-ubuntu - Repositories
GitHubcorsicanguppy
in reply to electricprism • • •You write "new kids value appearance over function and lack the mentors to show them why that's bad" funny. And, you should use the other punctuation for a question.
Phoenixz
in reply to corsicanguppy • • •TCB13
in reply to daggermoon • • •"Remember any Linux desktop distro that targets the end user? Pretty sure it's dead"
Get over yourselves, Linux desktop will never succeed unless there's professional and proprietary software that people really need to be productive / make money available for it. I'm talking about Adobe, MS Office, Autodesk and all the specific stuff that forces people into using Windows. Don't believe me? Look at the gaming space, it only became marginally relevant once Steam decided to start porting all their proprietary games (software) to Linux.
lambipapp
in reply to TCB13 • • •like this
TVA likes this.
ErnieBernie10
in reply to TCB13 • • •TCB13
in reply to ErnieBernie10 • • •Possibly linux
in reply to TCB13 • • •Phoenixz
in reply to TCB13 • • •TCB13
in reply to Phoenixz • • •Handles
in reply to daggermoon • • •setVeryLoud(true);
in reply to Handles • • •xavier666
in reply to setVeryLoud(true); • • •Lantern
in reply to daggermoon • • •SplashJackson
in reply to daggermoon • • •Cutefish? I'm all about the Dopefish.
Swim swim hungry
Possibly linux
in reply to daggermoon • • •Wispy2891
in reply to daggermoon • • •I watched the GitHub and it looks like it's deepin os with a custom settings app and a MacOS style dock.
At that point just install deepin os and hope they don't lie about user privacy (being owned by a Chinese for-profit doesn't help)
daggermoon
in reply to Wispy2891 • • •