Ubuntu Touch deliver their 6th 20.04 release, postmarketOS share what progress they've made in October, a new collection of Sailfish Community News, a build your own x86_64 'phone' guide, and more! Also, as we're already on that day in some parts of the globe: Happy 15th anniversary, Nokia N900!
> A change queued up last week by AMDGPU driver maintainer Alex Deucher will now default to the fullscreen 3D workload profile for discrete GPUs. AMD APUs with integrated graphics will continue to use the default "bootup" power profile but discrete graphics cards will be running in the "fullscreen 3D" power profile by default.
That actually is impressive! I like your style. Curious, how long did it take you to get to this point?
This Week: postmarketOS moved to their own gitlab, a new app for XMPP calls, Plasma 6.2 bringing Alpine apks to Discover, improved Kirigami Addons, news from the GNOME Foundation, updates to user0's Mobile Friendly Firefox customizations and more!
This Week in Neovim79: Official Supermaven code completion in Neovim, Beautiful menu UI for Neovim, NvChad UI collection, reactive UI development
This Week in Neovim 79 with news and updates from the Neovim plugin ecosystem and Neovim core.
cross-posted from: https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/23311254
This Week in Neovim79: Official Supermaven code completion in Neovim, Beautiful menu UI for Neovim, NvChad UI collection, reactive UI development
This Week in Neovim 79 with news and updates from the Neovim plugin ecosystem and Neovim core.
Editors, Adam Turner and Thomas Wouters,. This article explains the new features in Python 3.13, compared to 3.12. Python 3.13 was released on October 7, 2024. For full details, see the changelog. ...
> Python 3.13 is the latest stable release of the Python programming language, with a mix of changes to the language, the implementation and the standard library. The biggest changes include a new interactive interpreter, experimental support for running in a free-threaded mode (PEP 703), and a Just-In-Time compiler (PEP 744).
Weekly GNU-like Mobile Linux Update (40/2024)
postmarketOS reports progress and moves to self-hosted gitlab instance, another Ubuntu Touch Q&A, a plethora of blog posts worth reading, fwupd 2.0, KDE app progress, PINE64 is still alive, a quaterly update by LinuxPhoneApps.org, and more!
Not the author. But thank you, I didn't know that.
Instead of doom-scrolling through my phone in the morning, I built an alternative with a Raspberry Pi, a dot matrix printer, and some PHP.
Aiming for a 10 year life-cycle for smartphones
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/20851873
Another week has almost passed, here's what happened: postmarketOS shares plans for adding systemd and immutability, a Sailfish OS community roundup, a Newsletter by UBports, some progress on working phone calls on the PinePhone Pro, Akademy talks uploaded on PeerTube, Valve seemingly invested in Pr...
It’s a well-known secret that inkjet ink is being kept at artificially high prices, which is why many opt to forego ‘genuine’ manufacturer cartridges and get third-party ones inst…
Interesting....TIL again!
cross-posted from: https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/22702031
Sony, Ubisoft scandals prompt California ban on deceptive sales of digital goods
New California law reminds us we don't own games and movies.
> California recently became the first state to ban deceptive sales of so-called "disappearing media."
> On Tuesday, Governor Gavin Newsom signed AB 2426 into law, protecting consumers of digital goods like books, movies, and video games from being duped into purchasing content without realizing access was only granted through a temporary license.
DetSys seems to have made a security release to NixCpp. The primary risk is leaking of netrc credentials through a crafted derivation plus an attacker-in-the-middle. Users of the experimental feature impure-derivations are at greater risk. FlakeHub Cache users and users of impure derivations sh...
cross-posted from: https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/22666403
DetSys seems to have made a security release to NixCpp. The primary risk is leaking of netrc credentials through a crafted derivation plus an attacker-in-the-middle. Users of the experimental feature impure-derivations are at greater risk. FlakeHub Cache users and users of impure derivations sh...
What you're doing is equivalent to
nix-shell -p "grim slurp"
Which won't work because nix-shell expects
nix-shell -p "grim" "slurp"
Which then becomes
{...}@args: with import <nixpkgs> args; (pkgs.runCommandCC or pkgs.runCommand) "shell" { buildInputs = [ (grim) (slurp) ]; } ""
According to the manual
nix-shell --packages
interprets each command line arguments as attribute names inside the Nix packages collection.
The error message is because you are giving multiple package names as a single argument.
I am not the author. Just thought this was interesting.