First 5 minutes of the last part of TROM II are done :) - a small beginning but the work continues. :)

I realize more and more that the new laptop indeed is faster even with Kdenlive which doesn't use the GPU at all really.

So, all good so far. I am curious how long it will take me to finish this part. If I work like crazy I may finish it in a month or so. But more likely in 2 months. Hard to tell. If that's the case by April I should be done. But then I need a month or so to improve a bit the other parts. Then I need to make a trailer and add all of the sources.

Anyway. The journey continues.

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Having 64GB of RAM is bliss for me. And I really use them. 32GB was always at the limit for me. Opening 2 Kdenlive projects or more for TROM II, testing stuff in VM for TROMjaro, having lots of opened tabs, and so forth, feels like a breeze now. Oh plus some 70GB of Swap memory haha.

Now I just barely started to work again on my laptop after I moved my stuff to it, so this does not reflect the normal use for me, but still almost 30GB of RAM used without VMs and just 1 Kdenlive project open:

Anyway, I like RAMs. And I use them. God bless :).

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in reply to Adam Kieliński

Seems like it might be a growing file cache in mem or something and there's a difference between free vs. available mem in Linux too. It isn't exactly that entire space is used directly by the processes (I'm not sure how exactly "used" value is calculated for that particular monitoring application, sometimes even different distros may count it differently).
Usually Linux tries to use physical mem as efficiently as possible and the most dangerous sign for the system performance is highly used swap disk space. So a simplified rule for the mem check might be: if the swap usage remains low, your system is in a good shape. Here's more detailed explanation: logicmonitor.com/blog/the-righ…

Today I spent some 2h doing some browsing, streaming, music listening, chatting on my laptop "in battery mode". Then we watched 2 documentaries on it. And it was still bragging about 2 more hours of use. Close to 3 haha. Yeah, I don't trust batteries much, but for me this is awesome. The fact that I can use my laptop like that too, is useful. It is what I wanted. I had 2 laptops before, shitty batteries. Max 2-3 hours of use while new. I used them as desktop computers. This is my first true laptop :).

Also OLED screens are really awesome. The black is truly black. Anyway, I am just happy with this laptop.

Another anyway, these days I was busy organizing the TROM Meeting for May, so I wasn't able to focus much on the documentary. I hope to finalize that these next 1-2 days. Then full focus on the documentary. No excuses.

I am so excited about the meeting. Can't wait to meet all of these awesome tromfriends. :)

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in reply to Reay Jespersen

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in reply to Rokosun

If my method worked to fix your issue then I recommend mentioning it here - gitlab.com/librewolf-community…

Let them know that their initial decision to disable Safe Browsing because of censorship concerns was a right one. False positives for matrix servers are real bad IMO.

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The best chatbot in the world?


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in reply to Tio

in reply to Tio

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Hi! Well, the daemon is part of the package "tblock", which is required by the GUI, so, yes, you can use the daemon with the GUI.
To check if it is enabled, there are several ways:
1. Open the GUI, click in the "TBlock" section in the navbar and go under Troubleshooting. You should see a message telling you whether the daemon is running.
2. Alternatively, you can run "tblock --status" from the command-line.
3. Using your init system (command is "systemctl status tblockd" if you use systemd)

Wow making ISOs for TROMjaro is so much faster now. 15 minutes to compile one!? Before it was around 50 minutes at least. That changes things a lot for me. I can make a bunch, fast, and test stuff. Lovely! Thanks again to those few wonderful ones who donated for the TROM Laptop campaign :) . It helps me, it helps TROM. It helps those who use the stuff that I produce.

Also installing it in a VM, 5 or so minutes. Fast fast fast.

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in reply to Roma

@esh @cyberghost It would be nice, indeed. Sadly, it is not possible, because TBlock only tells your system what to block. It doesn't block the servers directly but does instead modifies a file called the "hosts file", and the blocking is directly done by the system based on the content of this file.
More information is available here if you're curious: codeberg.org/tblock/tblock-gui…
@Roma

in reply to Tio

@mark
There are ways to measure battery capacity - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric…

But for an avarage user all we care about is how long the battery lasts, which can vary depending on how efficiently the laptop and the processor utilizes its power. So yeah, its more complicated than just measuring battery capacity. But I'm sure there are ways to measure these things too, like if I let my laptop calculate the digits of pi for an hour to measure the battery drain and compare it with other laptops 🤷

@Mark
in reply to Tio

Yup, totally, that was my experience all along.. I never got the declared battery life time at least once. That's why I never expected a great mobility from a laptop and mostly use it plugged in, basically using the battery as a fallback when power outage happen or need to move it to other place in the room without turning the computer off. Though manufacturers can't stop to feed you with high numbers, that's fo sho..

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in reply to Rokosun

Stop doubting Sasha's skills Roko! haha She did it. Granted I helped just a little, but tiny, with the idea of the text and how to animate it with that sound effect, and some suggestions with the music. But she edited the music, the videos, how to be put together, and all that :) - she got great at it haha. So basically she 100% made it. I only suggested a few little things. When she showed it to me at first I was laughing so hard haahah.

I updated to the kernel 6.1 and I am happy that now the audio on my laptop works properly. Granted just 2 speakers out of 4, but soon the fix will land in the kernel 6.2 so that all of the speakers will work. Also it fixed the issue with my screen brightness - when I lowered it to the max low I could not bring it up again. Now works! Finally it fixed the issue with closing the lid. Now it respects the settings I have for that, such as suspend, hibernate, lock, whatever.

Also, changing some stuff in the BIOS as suggested on some arch forums, makes the hibernation kinda work....but idk. I don't use that anyway.

All in all, everything works on this laptop, except 2 speakers for which a fix was already pushed so should be fixed soon, and the hibernation may not be perfect. How awesome! Thank you Linux and thank you to everyone who contributes to the open source software universe.

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So the new laptop speeds up my work on TROMjaro quite a bit. When I make ISOs for TROMjaro I usually make a bunch to test this, that, fix more, test more. For every ISO that I release I may make 4-5. To build one was taking around 50-60 minutes in total. Maybe more at times. Now?

HALF! At times even quicker.

So yeah, that's super cool. I will test these days the rendering speeds for the TROM II documentary, curious about that. But ofc since this laptop has 3 more cores than the previous one, of course it will be faster.

I am so happy with this laptop.

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