Well, previous approach was a dead end in terms of functionality and platform support. I’d like to think of it as a prototype. BTW, the test suit was written in Python and had been left in touch to ensure the same behavior if the rework.
Serge Matveenko
- 3 Posts
- 24 Comments
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Fedora 42 Is Looking At Switching To EROFS For Its Live MediaEnglish62·4 months agoDoes this mean that it will become PG 16 after this change?
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Which version of Windows would you compare the current state of Linux in 2025 to?English44·4 months agoThe features I use Linux for never were in Windows and probably never will be.
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Open Source@lemmy.ml•A simple bash script that allows the user to visually explore their file system.English1·4 months agoKeep it up. A competitor to watch would be the
broot
project
3D shooters – hard no. Everything else pretty much ok: city building, civilization. I play arcade games using gamepad though. However, I’ve got my best records in gnome-mines using trackball:) The game is a good way of training using one as well
I’ve moved to trackballs several years ago
I don’t have a solution for you. Just wanted to cheer you up a little with my experience in a similar situation. In my case those phantom clicks and mouse movement were from a wireless mouse my kid uses which he was fiddling with like it’s a fidget in another room thinking he has turned it off.
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•With all this ghostty talk. Am I out of touch for still using terminator all these years?English1·4 months agoMaintainers wanted. At least it’s not completely dead…
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Which Linux tool or command is surprisingly simple, powerful, and yet underrated?"English262·4 months agoI don’t see anyone mentions
htop
. So, I will:) Just works, could be installed in any distro. Much more friendly than top but isn’t bloated with features as some other alternatives are.
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Which Linux tool or command is surprisingly simple, powerful, and yet underrated?"English4·4 months agoOn the subject of editors,
joe
is just awesome: lightweight, powerful, had coffee coloring and line numbers, and you can choose it with Ctrl+C:)
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Which Linux tool or command is surprisingly simple, powerful, and yet underrated?"English6·4 months agoIf you’d map it to just
f
it’s even more handy
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Which Linux tool or command is surprisingly simple, powerful, and yet underrated?"English10·4 months agoA really simple one but surprisingly useful is
cal
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Pidgin 3.0 Experimental 1 Has been released!English1·5 months agoAggregating Matrix, xmpp, irc, and telegram could work for me. But I’d rather did this on my private matrix instance now though.
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•With all this ghostty talk. Am I out of touch for still using terminator all these years?English41·5 months agoTerminator isn’t supported anymore as far as I remember. A good substitution for it is Tilix. I’d been using the latter for a while but recently I switched to the new default terminal in Fedora (it had weird name that I unable to remember) and Tilling Shell extension for Gnome.
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•in most gnu/linux distributions that use xfce or gnome, why is the default music/audio player rhythmbox??English1·5 months agoFedora changed it to the one I’ll never remember the name of;)
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Pidgin 3.0 Experimental 1 Has been released!English5·5 months agoPersonally, I’m looking forward for our to stabilize to try working on Matrix protocol support.
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Is using an HDD with an SSD as cache on Linux a good idea?English2·5 months agoI was using this kind of a setup a long time ago with 120GB SSD and 1TB HDD. I’ve found the overall speedup pretty remarkable. It felt like a 1TB SSD most of the time. So, having a cache drive of around 10% of the main drive seems like a good size to cost compromise. Having a cache 50% size of the basic storage feels like a waste to me.
Serge Matveenko@lemmings.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there any practical / production size use case for LFS?English2·5 months agoFirst of all, LFS is a book. It is intended for learning. The working Linux system you’re ending up with after finishing reading the book is just a result of you performing practicing exercises while reading the book.
As far as I can see in the firmware code it has Arduino under the hood. And the firmware itself doesn’t look that complicated. If I’m ever buying one I’d definitely rewriting the api client to my liking:)