

hopefully it’s good, don’t want to mix work and personal stuff


hopefully it’s good, don’t want to mix work and personal stuff


Little bits and pieces but mostly bug fixes - I like my shit working but maintenance is not my strong suit, more of a traveling contributor or drive-thru fixer.
I believe I fixed calling in one electron messenger.com wrapper before - that was fun but these days I usually try to help the game BAR whenever I have extra time.
Edit: Keep forgetting but I am also maintaining few apps on AUR, nothing big except for maybe one helper tool/calculator for EVE online


unsure if the translations work well in english but checkout Christian Morgenstern, he made similar “silly” poems


Flameshot: screenshotting tool with everything you would ever need for screenshots
Best bet would be that something reloaded/changed the underlying ip/nftables bypassing ufw (ufw is just a frontend, I do not know if it periodically verifies the current rules are correct and it would feel extraneous to me if it did). Or it didn’t apply it correctly.
You can get the actual rules with iptables-save (dunno about respective nftables command)
If your primary usecase is going to be music (so a need for realtime capabilities for stuff like recording, VSTs and DAWs) then I do not reccomend immutable distros for a simple reason: you will probably/eventually need to hack something up to get it to work and at that moment, the immutability is just extra work.
As far as I have tried fiddling with the music stack on Linux (which is not that much), the whole pipewire/JACK/carla stack is a bit messy and I can’t imagine it working with flatpacks due to the sandboxing/permissions.
in that case you can grab any of the other distros that are Arch-based, EndeavourOS/Garuda/CachyOS and so on. You will get the benefits of rolling-release like fresh-er software without the need to setup & configure it yourself.


I just got myself second hand xtx for about 650 euro


Well one very good reason would be that their specification is closed source and as such not even HDMI Forum partner AMD can implement them in their open source driver.
https://www.phoronix.com/news/HDMI-Closed-Spec-Hurts-Open
DisplayPort spec is fully open btw.


played it on nix and it worked well in the beta, very cool game but the price tag is a bit steep
One is trying Bazzite the other one is just classic fedora
Two of my friends switched recently.
They had none to very little experience with anything Linux before, their previous win11 installs just over bloated and the copilot bullshit pushed them over. Both (indie/non-pop shooters) gamers btw.
This is the year of linux.
Friend just hopped to Bazzite from Windows.
I was hoping the atomocity would be a great boon - you kind of can’t break it right.
Well, he wanted to configure RGB lighting on his mouse but the flatpak openrgb did not work, supposedly the udev rules included in bazzite by default, are not up to date or there was some other problem.
As such we had to install openrgb the usual system-wide way, with rpm-ostree in terminal - something I was hoping he would never had to do.
Unless the vendor is rolling something super custom, for the communication TO the keyboard, it should use USB HID.
Start Wireshark, filter for hid, connect the KB and the first message should be a HID descriptor of the KB, look for Output Reports (it’s meant from the POV of the usb master) or Feature Reports.
Though, this will probably not yield much insight - vendors love to do the easy thing, reserve opaque 32x8 bytes as a “downlink” Output communication in the Vendor Usage Page and stuff their own protocol/encoding in there.
On linux I can recommend hid-tools for working with this, in windows I believe your only solution is Wireshark.
https://www.marcusfolkesson.se/blog/hid-report-descriptors/
Happy Hacking!
E: About the already reversed software, for logitech (and more) stuff, there is piper but you will want to look into the underlying daemon libratbag, there is also solaar


I can’t do that even on PC, tried to delete dead LAN url many times, it always comes back


I’ve always used just Green With Envy but this seems just a bit more polished and active, nice


How did you open this? Maybe something overrode your default text editor application (look in settings for Default Applications).
Also maybe check your EDITOR env variable (echo $EDITOR), though that is only used when a different CLI program wants to open an editor for you (in CLI)


You are replacing partitions with subvolumes, as such you have to make these operations on the btrfs filesystem (so as others have already written, deleting the subvolume instead of re-formatting the partition).


As a (semi) power user I also use btrfs subvolumes to create “partitions” (single disk system, @root, @home, @docker), allows for making snapshots only for system or user data, etc.
All around, I love btrfs and I am never going back to journaling fs like ext4
did you apt update beforehand ? it is weird that it’s trying to install lower level libc6