Monthly Archives: June 2024

KDE Plasma 6.1 released

Source: OSNews

Article note: Cool. I'm not happy that they had to do their own hacky bespoke thing to get something resembling session restore, but I've been very irritated at it not being there on the two machines I've been doing Plasma Wayland on.

After the very successful release of KDE Plasma 6.0, which moved the entire desktop environment and most of its applications over to Qt 6, fixed a whole slow of bugs, and streamlined the entire KDE desktop and its applications, it’s now time for KDE Plasma 6.1, where we’re going to see a much stronger focus on new features. While it’s merely a point release, it’s still a big one.

The tentpole new feature of Plasma 6.1 is access to remote Plasma desktops. You can go into Settings and log into any Plasma desktop, which is built entirely and directly into KDE’s own Wayland compositor, avoiding the use of third party applications of hacky extensions to X.org. Having such remote access built right into the desktop environment and its compositor itself is a much cleaner implementation than in the before time with X.

Another feature that worked just fine under X but was still missing from KDE Plasma on Wayland is something they now call “persistent applications” – basically, KDE will now remember which windows you had open when you closed KDE or shut down your computer, and open them back up right where you left off when you log back in. It’s one of those things that got lost in the transition to Wayland, and having it back is really, really welcome.

Speaking of Wayland, KDE Plasma 6.1 also introduces two major new rendering features. Explicit sync removes flickering and glitches most commonly seen on NVIDIA hardware, while triple buffering provides smoother animations and screen rendering. There’s more here, too, such as a completely reworked edit desktop view, support for controlling keyboard LED backlighting traditionally found in gaming laptops, and more.

KDE Plasma 6.1 will find its way to your distribution of choice soon enough, but of course, you can compile and install it yourself, too.

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We Remember Noam Chomsky, the Intellectual and Moral Giant

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Oh man, the world with out Chomsky. That's weird to contemplate. Ed: and apparently hasn't come about yet.
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“Attention assault” on Fandom

Source: Hacker News

Article note: It's the union of a bunch of bad shit. Hosting wikis is ...not actually very difficult or expensive.. but somehow the fandom folks attracted $40M of investment and the investors want returns, leading to a shitstorm of ads and tracking. Leaving is hard not just because Fandom will use hired admins to prevent mass deletion, but because search engines - especially google - treat site-size as a positive indicator, so even an abandoned fandom wiki will be hard to out-rank. I miss the old Internet _so much_.
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Where did you go, Ms. Pac-Man?

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Ms. Pac-Man is probably my favorite classic arcade game, and I knew about the weirdness about it being a GCC game adopted by Midway rather than a Namco product, but this is ..extensive and weird.
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US sues Adobe for subscriptions that are too hard to cancel

Source: The Verge - All Posts

Article note: This is a scam I'd like to see addressed more aggressively. Adobe are pretty high on the list of offenders, so it makes a good case.
Adobe
Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

The US government is suing Adobe for allegedly hiding expensive fees and making it difficult to cancel a subscription. In the complaint filed on Monday, the Department of Justice claims Adobe “has harmed consumers by enrolling them in its default, most lucrative subscription plan without clearly disclosing important plan terms.”

The lawsuit alleges Adobe “hides” the terms of its annual, paid monthly plan in the “fine print and behind optional textboxes and hyperlinks.” In doing so, the company fails to properly disclose the early termination fee incurred upon cancellation “that can amount to hundreds of dollars,” the complaint says.

When customers do attempt to cancel, the DOJ alleges that Adobe requires them to go through an “onerous...

Continue reading…

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Survival of the Mediocre Mediocre (2018)

Source: Hacker News

Article note: It's a 2018 essay and _way_ too wordy, but the essential argument - that super-optimizing for present conditions will leave an entity without the energy/flexibility to adapt to changes in conditions - is good and, although everyone would say they agree if asked, there is a lot of personal and organizational min-maxing behavior that indicates they behave to the contrary.
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Building an O2 concentrator for welding and vacuum tube work

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Pressure Swing Adsorption is just neat. I'd been curious how hard it is to DIY one of these things since Zeolite 13x is pretty cheap and accessible, the concept is simple, and the pressures aren't _alarmingly_ high. Looks like the OxyKit folks saw that thought through. I'm kind of curious how - in the current post-COVID in the US market context - DIYing this thing competes with a cheap commercial one (which looks like it can get down into the $200 range) or maybe an electrolysis splitter on cost and practicality. I'm curious about some applications for a little concentrated O2, like the potential of using an O2 assist on a cutting laser.
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POSIX.1-2024 is published

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I didn't realize anyone was still working on the POSIX standards. Apparently there's an Open Group/IEEE combined effort.
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ARM torpedoes Windows on ARM: Demands destruction of all PCs with Snapdragon X

Source: Hacker News

Article note: WTF is arm up to here? Qualcomm ate Nuvia whose architecture license apparently specified they were for server or non-mobile or something applications, and are now repurposing a derived core for the laptop market... so ARM is suing to cut off the competing core. It's possible Qualcomm ate Nuvia as a side-step specifically _because_ ARM was being weird about giving them an architectural license. I assume they just want a bigger licensing cut, like everything they've done since Softbank.
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Lynn Conway has died

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Aw. Her track record is one that indicated a truly unusual level of genius; Even before widespread knowledge of her work at IBM on what was probably the origin of Superscalar architectures (because it was pre-transition), her VLSI work was world-changing.
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