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Har 13-åringen som angrep Elbit en högerextrem bakgrund?. Det israeliska vapenföretaget Elbit Systems som har verksamhet i det militärindustriella komplexet i Göteborg och Mölndal angreps nyligen av en 13-åring försedd med skjutvapen. Närmare bestämt ligger Elbits anläggning i Kallebäck där flertalet av det försvarsmaterialföretag siom finns i Göteborg ligger. Tidigare låg de […]

blog.zaramis.se/2024/10/18/13-…



Two finger touch to stop kinetic scroll now works on Linux in Firefox 133


reshared this

in reply to Atemu

Looking through the gitlab, it seems the backport of this hold gesture to GTK3 was rejected for good reason. Seems very unfair to imply it was done out of sheer spite.

It would break a lot, require a new API, and devs reworking a lot of programs.

It's also completely reasonable just from the POV of not accepting major new features in GTK3 when GTK4 exists.

Devs likely expect GTK3 to be feature-stable, given GTK4 has been out a while and GTK5 work starting soon. It's at the tail-end of its life.

If somebody wanted a major new feature in Python, for example, I wouldn't be surprised if the Python team gave it the go-ahead for Python 3 but not Python 2. GTK3 is done, they're only really doing bug fixes now.

Nobody expects new features to be added to Plasma 5 or Gnome 45.

It's 100% the right decision not to keep adding features to an old widget toolkit that has been superceded by GTK4 and is almost EoL.

That issue aside... good. Seems like a nice feature.

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to TheGrandNagus

It would break a lot, require a new API, and devs reworking a lot of programs.


As I understand it, this would have been a perfectly backwards compatible change. You'd only get the events if you explicitly asked for them.

in reply to Atemu

This was one of the most annoying things to me switching to Firefox a couple of years ago.

I've also been following this bug since switching (back), and have kinetic scroll turned off for the last few years, I somehow got used to linear scrolling -- it's not something that bothers me anymore, but I'll be happy to switch back now!



Man på byggföretag byggde bomber. En man som arbetade på ett byggföretag var en bombkonstruktör för ett kriminellt gäng i Göteborg. Närmare bestämt för det Mölndalsbaserade kriminella gänget som brukar kallas T-falangen.

blog.zaramis.se/2024/10/18/man…

This entry was edited (1 year ago)


DLSS Frame-gen Is coming to Linux


You can try out the Proton-Cachyos with frame gen package if you're on arch-based systems with pacman -U archive.cachyos.org/proton/proton-cachyos-1:9.0.20240928-1-x86_64_v3.pkg.tar.zst

or you can download custom tkg-proton with frame generation from
mediafire.com/file/lv7d8jci0gyf6z0/proton_dlssfg.tar.zst/file and put into your ~/.steam/steam/compatibilitytools.d/

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to kipparikalle161

this is so games can render at half the framerate, but the fps counter doesn't show it right? Yay? I guess..
in reply to vrighter

It’s actually really nice given the fps without framegen is playable.

I found it to have a positive impact for heavy titles that run around 40fps without it.

Anything below 30 gives this weird stutter



Ardour 8.10 released


Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) for people who want to record, edit, mix and master audio and MIDI projects. When you need complete control over your tools, when the limitations of other designs get in the way, when you plan to spend hours or days working on a session, Ardour is there to make things work the way you want them to.

reshared this

in reply to petsoi

In Linux there are already much better options than Ardour that I highly suggest to try:
- REAPER as a standard DAW and Ardour equivalent.
- Bitwig Studio for more sequencer-like worflows (alternative to Ableton Live, FL)

These are not hobbyist products, we are talking about professional level software here, so they are both paid.

In any case REAPER is usable for free if you don't use it commercially and it's so cheap for the value it brings that there are no excuses for not buying it.

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
Unknown parent

lemmy - Link to source
slst
I mean it works pretty flawlessly for me and I make music all the time. Some plugins don't work the best but most of them are working well


Tillslag mot hawala-verksamheter. Poliser och ekobrottsutredare från Ekobrottsmyndigheten (EBM) genomförde förra veckan en insats mot betalförmedlare, så kallade hawala-verksamheter, i Göteborg. Vid insatsen beslagtogs 635 000 kronor i kontanter samt annan viktig bevisning.

blog.zaramis.se/2024/10/18/til…


in reply to no_nothing

To paraphrase a Tupac poem:

The sunflower that grew from concrete.


The actual poem - The rose that grew from concrete.

Did you hear about the rose that grew
from a crack in the concrete?
Proving nature’s law is wrong it
learned to walk with out (sic) having feet.
Funny it seems, but by keeping its dreams,
it learned to breathe fresh air.
Long live the rose that grew from concrete
when no one else cared.
in reply to dependencyinjection

People sometimes forget that he went to Baltimore School for the Arts, one of the best public arts schools in the country. The man was talented.

in reply to dullbananas (Joseph Silva)

Your btrfs was in a LUKS partition and you can decode it? But know that btrfs uses smart compression by default, so you can recover jpeg or zip easily in general, but for stuff compressed, not sure how to decompress them by hand ... Like other commenter wrote, first do a full copy on another HD.
This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to dullbananas (Joseph Silva)

I would definitely try using photorec if you have specific files you hope to find. It may not handle btrfs well but any files stored as a contiguous chunk should be recoverable.

I would also try partition recovery with testdisk but chances are it won't do much for btrfs.

You can try the steps in this article: suse.com/support/kb/doc/?id=00…

Don't forget to copy your volume if there's anything super important in there. only a very small part of the volume was zeroed, if tools don't exist to recover the data now, they will eventually 😅



I en internationell operation, Operation PowerOFF, har US-amerikanska myndigheter med stöd av bland andra svensk polis identifierat och åtalat hackare. De har dessutom stängt ner flera servrar som använts vid cyberattacker över hela världen.

blog.zaramis.se/2024/10/18/hac…


in reply to Cowbee [he/they]

The idea that Lenin was an avid supporter of logging off is a lie perpetrated by Trotsky.
in reply to JoJoIsStaling

Trotsky has sent me a silly DM. We shall neither open it nor reply to it.




Kashgar grid connects massive PV storage integrated project




[OC] I had issues "multiboxing" in EVE Online on Linux, but figured out a super easy way to make it work (even with my room-temperature IQ)


I love EVE Online, but "multiboxing" was tricky for me in Linux. I like using the CLI for everything I can, but get completely swamped still when dealing with cocktails like Lutris, WINE prefixes, and dependencies.

So I was super interested when I stumbled upon Bottles - it seemed to solve a lot of my issues. Then, I realized GNOME's workspaces basically did the same thing as the old Windows program I used... and that was all she wrote. It worked perfectly for me, why overthink it?

I recorded my newbie solution to (hopefully) convince other players to switch. Do you have any advice or corrections for me? Did I make a cardinal sin? Is this the dumbest thing you've ever seen? Hit me with your honest takes. ❤

in reply to kep

How ironic your comment could be...

No one said multiboxing is botting here...


in reply to just_another_person

The video in the article is really interesting. It gives a great view of how much we know about the space around us.

For context, this video: Laniakea: Our home supercluster was the state-of-the-art map in 2014. It looks like our knowledge in this area has really expanded incredibly in the last 10 years.

Also more detailed video from the academic team: Laniakea Supercluster

This entry was edited (1 year ago)

in reply to Spectre

I love how we get all the credit for nearly everything good :3
in reply to kittenzrulz123

I would consider "race mixing" something more neutral, because it should be the norm
in reply to random

But its also a form of tearing down hierarchies (in this case racial hierarchies perpetuated by capitalism), I can see that being left wing
in reply to random

gonna use this as an opportunity to launch my ted talk:

there's no such thing as anything but "race mixing" since every single human on the planet is a mix of different ancient races anyway

(or to put another way, race is a bs term anyway since we're all homosapiens)

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Spectre

I love how every decade some Americans blame communism for stuff they dont personally like. This decade it is free healthcare.


China, leader in EVs, could overtake the world in hydrogen mobility too


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Does not matter, hydrogen is not really the future

☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ doesn't like this.

in reply to ChaoticNeutralCzech

We don't have any "green" hydrogen source at the moment. Hydrogen generation, currently, still releases carbon.

Hydrogen "engines" are only ~40% efficient compared to, say, BEVs that are ~80% efficient.

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Scott

It's important to look, not only at the vehicle, but at the energy efficiency of the system as a whole.
Well-To-Wheel it's referred to as.

Gasoline: ~20%
Diesel: ~30%
H Fuel Cell: ~25%
BEV (fossil power): ~20%*
BEV (renewable): ~55%*

*BEV is highly dependent on energy source. Anwhere from ~20% WTW from natural gas power generation to 75% from roof-mounted solar.

Keep in mind this is a summary of a summary of a summary.

::: spoiler Sources:
- researchgate.net/publication/3…
- c2e2.unepccc.org/wp-content/up…
- yaleclimateconnections.org/202…
:::

This entry was edited (1 year ago)