Ranger CLI maintainers want to "focus on future" and have just shifted their tool towards IRC client features, renamed their project "IRangerC".
https://github.com/ranger/ranger#ranger-204-1
https://redd.it/ft0vsj
@r_linux
https://github.com/ranger/ranger#ranger-204-1
https://redd.it/ft0vsj
@r_linux
GitHub
GitHub - ranger/ranger: A VIM-inspired filemanager for the console
A VIM-inspired filemanager for the console. Contribute to ranger/ranger development by creating an account on GitHub.
Learn things to people
Hi,
Im a great fan of linux and I want people to know that it is not just command line and that you cand do things easily.
I recently created a subreddit r/AdviceCSProgramming to learn quick and short facts about computers from programming to theory. I need some people to write things about linux (kernel, shell, c language in linux, ...) to learn things to people easily.
Thanks in advance ;D
https://redd.it/fukc6v
@r_linux
Hi,
Im a great fan of linux and I want people to know that it is not just command line and that you cand do things easily.
I recently created a subreddit r/AdviceCSProgramming to learn quick and short facts about computers from programming to theory. I need some people to write things about linux (kernel, shell, c language in linux, ...) to learn things to people easily.
Thanks in advance ;D
https://redd.it/fukc6v
@r_linux
reddit
Learn things to people
Hi, Im a great fan of linux and I want people to know that it is not just command line and that you cand do things easily. I recently created a...
UBUNTU KYLIN 20.04 LOOKS ABSOLUTELY WONDERFUL
I've just installed the new Ubuntu Kylin 20.04 with UKUI 3.0 and it is absolutely amazing, for being a preview this looks already deepin-grade style.
There're a few details to polish but the team is asking for help reporting bugs in this testing period.
They said that a lot of these bugs and details won't be in the official release, and also a lot of new features will come. For more information: https://www.ubuntukylin.com/news/shownews.php?id=1576&lang=en
Take a look:
​
https://preview.redd.it/4uldt92o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=7d2fe20d9e255c2b2d44d2f7cc36b42fc52f4a3b
https://preview.redd.it/wz6i4a2o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=fcafec6c45da2ed6bfeba92b12d58b30cf969821
https://preview.redd.it/60u7v42o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=d7807f5b45098019fdf5474ba0c9d093bf978bc2
https://preview.redd.it/brm1j32o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=4b66188ad273cc5951b21b589df0bdc1489ea314
https://preview.redd.it/z0uk4h2o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=d5165c9bc25d7b421184a1c8089ea2d7827072c4
https://preview.redd.it/lctr0n2o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=eb5e03d744f1f495e00775f0390a59103af3ce77
https://preview.redd.it/sos41f4o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=cbaa309ef86ac0ab2652e982676a7a1165ac0ed9
https://preview.redd.it/0ahb6z1o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=713a23ddf0a9d9b782128c0560e1c49f0610a1d4
https://redd.it/fujw4s
@r_linux
I've just installed the new Ubuntu Kylin 20.04 with UKUI 3.0 and it is absolutely amazing, for being a preview this looks already deepin-grade style.
There're a few details to polish but the team is asking for help reporting bugs in this testing period.
They said that a lot of these bugs and details won't be in the official release, and also a lot of new features will come. For more information: https://www.ubuntukylin.com/news/shownews.php?id=1576&lang=en
Take a look:
​
https://preview.redd.it/4uldt92o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=7d2fe20d9e255c2b2d44d2f7cc36b42fc52f4a3b
https://preview.redd.it/wz6i4a2o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=fcafec6c45da2ed6bfeba92b12d58b30cf969821
https://preview.redd.it/60u7v42o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=d7807f5b45098019fdf5474ba0c9d093bf978bc2
https://preview.redd.it/brm1j32o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=4b66188ad273cc5951b21b589df0bdc1489ea314
https://preview.redd.it/z0uk4h2o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=d5165c9bc25d7b421184a1c8089ea2d7827072c4
https://preview.redd.it/lctr0n2o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=eb5e03d744f1f495e00775f0390a59103af3ce77
https://preview.redd.it/sos41f4o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=cbaa309ef86ac0ab2652e982676a7a1165ac0ed9
https://preview.redd.it/0ahb6z1o3pq41.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=713a23ddf0a9d9b782128c0560e1c49f0610a1d4
https://redd.it/fujw4s
@r_linux
Ubuntukylin
Ubuntu Kylin 20.04 Beta Released!
On April 2, 2020 Beijing time, the Ubuntu Kylin team is pleased to announce the release of Ubuntu Kylin open source operating system 20.04 beta, which also marks the final stage of the development of
Why GNU/Linux?
Hello,
I request you to answer my query which is as follows:
Why 'GNU/Linux' is used and not "Linux-based GNU System". If it seems a long name then why " Linux-based Android System" just use Android. So, why do we use GNU/Linux and not just GNU or "Linux-based…System".
Sorry for the usage of confusing Language but it has a reason.
https://redd.it/fun5vp
@r_linux
Hello,
I request you to answer my query which is as follows:
Why 'GNU/Linux' is used and not "Linux-based GNU System". If it seems a long name then why " Linux-based Android System" just use Android. So, why do we use GNU/Linux and not just GNU or "Linux-based…System".
Sorry for the usage of confusing Language but it has a reason.
https://redd.it/fun5vp
@r_linux
reddit
Why GNU/Linux?
Hello, I request you to answer my query which is as follows: Why 'GNU/Linux' is used and not "Linux-based GNU System". If it seems a long name...
An interview with Mark Shuttleworth of Canonical
https://invidio.us/watch?v=UDHL3youjIY
https://redd.it/ft2qv4
@r_linux
https://invidio.us/watch?v=UDHL3youjIY
https://redd.it/ft2qv4
@r_linux
Invidious
Linux Spotlight EP42 - Mark Shuttleworth of Canonical
In this episode of Linux Spotlight, it is my pleasure to sit down and talk with Mark Shuttleworth about his journey into Linux. We talk about his thoughts on Ubuntu and Canonical and his excitement for
High resolution wheel scrolling in the desktop stack
https://who-t.blogspot.com/2020/04/high-resolution-wheel-scrolling-in.html
https://redd.it/fuok0k
@r_linux
https://who-t.blogspot.com/2020/04/high-resolution-wheel-scrolling-in.html
https://redd.it/fuok0k
@r_linux
Blogspot
High resolution wheel scrolling in the desktop stack
This is a follow up from the kernel support for high-resolution wheel scrolling which you totally forgot about because it's already more t...
Blog post about the security & privacy of Jitsi Meet, an apache-2 licensed video-conferencing solution.
https://jitsi.org/news/security/
https://redd.it/fup8z1
@r_linux
https://jitsi.org/news/security/
https://redd.it/fup8z1
@r_linux
Jitsi
Jitsi Meet Security & Privacy | Jitsi
How secure is Jitsi? Learn more about the Jitsi Meet Security & Privacy information, including how we make sure to protect your privacy here.
Minifree is shutting down, permanently
https://minifree.org/product-category/laptops/
https://redd.it/fupkkc
@r_linux
https://minifree.org/product-category/laptops/
https://redd.it/fupkkc
@r_linux
Do x86_64bit ISO Works On 32bit Only And 64bit Only CPU ?
I was just wondering if x86_64 ISO Files Works on both 32bit and 64bit only CPU thx! Because I have an x86_64bit Computer and It worked. I was wondering If it would work on 32bit only and 64bit only CPU too, As I heard x86_64 supports both THX!
https://redd.it/fuqehy
@r_linux
I was just wondering if x86_64 ISO Files Works on both 32bit and 64bit only CPU thx! Because I have an x86_64bit Computer and It worked. I was wondering If it would work on 32bit only and 64bit only CPU too, As I heard x86_64 supports both THX!
https://redd.it/fuqehy
@r_linux
reddit
Do x86_64bit ISO Works On 32bit Only And 64bit Only CPU ?
I was just wondering if x86_64 ISO Files Works on both 32bit and 64bit only CPU thx! Because I have an x86_64bit Computer and It worked. I was...
My contributions to elementary OS as a non-coder and how you can too!
https://jatan.blog/2020/04/04/my-contributions-to-elementary-os-and-how-you-can-too/
https://redd.it/fuss1f
@r_linux
https://jatan.blog/2020/04/04/my-contributions-to-elementary-os-and-how-you-can-too/
https://redd.it/fuss1f
@r_linux
Uncertain Jatan
My contributions to elementary OS as a non-coder and how you can too!
The power of suggestions in open source software.
Best OS for live USB
I am a student, and I am looking for an OS that runs well as a Live USB. I primarily need it for Google Docs, and I don’t want to dual boot, as I have always had troubles with dual booting.
I have been looking at Cloudready, but I’m wondering if there is a better alternative. I’d like my data to save whilst using the OS.
https://redd.it/fusqte
@r_linux
I am a student, and I am looking for an OS that runs well as a Live USB. I primarily need it for Google Docs, and I don’t want to dual boot, as I have always had troubles with dual booting.
I have been looking at Cloudready, but I’m wondering if there is a better alternative. I’d like my data to save whilst using the OS.
https://redd.it/fusqte
@r_linux
reddit
Best OS for live USB
I am a student, and I am looking for an OS that runs well as a Live USB. I primarily need it for Google Docs, and I don’t want to dual boot, as I...
macOS clone in Linux with a twist -- Everything in the screenshots is automated via noscript. Github repo in comments. Complete with pretty themes, QoL configurations, and cmd+key hotkey rebindings!
https://redd.it/fuu6eu
@r_linux
https://redd.it/fuu6eu
@r_linux
Expert writers - Accuratly and diligently written aricles
Article Directory with press release service is the channel to submit a press release with proper etiquette, make sure the headline and first paragraph show that the release is newsworthy. We distribute your news to traditional and digital key media through this press release and news portal free of charge. A press release is a written communication that reports specific but brief information about an event, circumstance, product launch, or other happening. It's typically tied to a business or organization and provided to media through a variety of means. Most companies write their own press releases. The only expense comes with hiring a press release distribution service to get the story in the hands of journalists and key news media. But even this is inexpensive, and when compared with paid advertising, press release distribution is almost always the more affordable option. Here you can order paid press release distribution as well.
Contact us before order any paid custom service or specified press release service.
All user content on this website is free for reprint, republish, and/or distribute for personal and/or commercial use. http://article-directory.org
https://redd.it/fuw9ub
@r_linux
Article Directory with press release service is the channel to submit a press release with proper etiquette, make sure the headline and first paragraph show that the release is newsworthy. We distribute your news to traditional and digital key media through this press release and news portal free of charge. A press release is a written communication that reports specific but brief information about an event, circumstance, product launch, or other happening. It's typically tied to a business or organization and provided to media through a variety of means. Most companies write their own press releases. The only expense comes with hiring a press release distribution service to get the story in the hands of journalists and key news media. But even this is inexpensive, and when compared with paid advertising, press release distribution is almost always the more affordable option. Here you can order paid press release distribution as well.
Contact us before order any paid custom service or specified press release service.
All user content on this website is free for reprint, republish, and/or distribute for personal and/or commercial use. http://article-directory.org
https://redd.it/fuw9ub
@r_linux
Test Driving Gnome3 on a Tablet (Surface Pro 3)
# Test Driving Gnome3 on a Tablet (Surface Pro 3)
I have been using Kubuntu/KDE on my Surface Pro 3 for a while. I decided I wanted to try Ubuntu/Gnome3.
# Trust the Gnome
The Gnome3 team has designed a specific kind of workflow. I'm going to do my best to follow that workflow as much as possible. Trust the Gnome!
# Performance
Performance was fine on my Surface Pro 3. I have an i7 processor and 8GB of RAM. The desktop idled at about 1GB of RAM in use. I think this desktop would run well on most machines, but might be a stretch for really low end devices like Raspberry Pi. By the numbers, KDE provided slightly lower CPU/RAM utilization, but the difference was inconsequential for me.
# Touchability
Obviously I'm intending to use this primarily as a touch device. From this perspective, Gnome has a vastly better user interface. Double taps, tap and drag, and other gestures work far better and far more often in Gnome than in KDE.
Buttons and GUI elements are easily tappable, and once fractional display scaling was enabled I was able to fit a decent amount of content on-screen and still manipulate it effectively.
The default apps are well configured for touch screens. The file explorer was a particular pleasure. One exception was Firefox, which was not configured for touch at all. The recipe to fix that is widely available online. I suspect Canonical hasn't enabled touch in Firefox because Mozilla still considers it an experimental feature.
> To enable 2 finger scrolling, add `MOZ_USE_XINPUT2 DEFAULT=1` to `/etc/security/pam_env.conf`, then open about:config in Firefox, then set dom.w3c_touch_events.enabled to 1, then reboot.
Suggestions: None. This category is excellent.
# On-Screen Keyboard
Gnome has the best on-screen keyboard integration of any distro I've ever seen. Called the "caribou" keyboard (or perhaps forked from that project), this keyboard pops up any time you touch a text field with your finger. It looks clean and sharp and is a joy to tap on.
The joy is short lived, however, when you realize the keyboard is missing the control and alt key. Apparently that "isn't the purpose" of this keyboard. I wonder if the Gnome3 team will add this feature another day.
The keyboard had the following hiccups during my testing:
1. It would sometimes push windows up and off the screen, which sometimes created problems. No workaround.
2. It would cover the text input field in google hangouts. Workaround was to "pop out" the chat.
3. Sometimes it would not appear when desired. Swipe up from the bottom of the screen and it shall be summoned.
4. It was supremely annoying when using finger taps to set the cursor in a text document. The on-screen keyboard shouldn't appear if I have a keyboard active. The workaround is to temporarily disable it with the _"Block-Caribou"_ shell extension.
There is a temptation to use the onboard keyboard instead, but this is a non-starter. The activities view and the general process of switching workspaces causes the onboard keyboard to wig out. It is likely worth installing and configuring the onboard keyboard just in case you need the control and alt keys, but for the most part this will not be a better experience.
Suggestions for Improvement:
* Add control and alt keys.
* Add a setting to prevent pop-up keyboard from repositioning windows
* Add setting to block Caribou Keyboard when a valid physical keyboard is available.
* Add a setting to get rid of Caribou entirely, for users that don't want it.
# Pen Input
Gnome3 doesn't do anything special with pen input, as far as I can tell. That said, pen input works fine with no interference from the desktop environment. I was able to use apps like Xournal++ and Krita just fine.
# Window Management
I love Gnome Activities. Tapping the super key drops you into an "activities" view, where you can tap on any window to bring it to the forefront. You can also start typing and the "activities" view will instantly change into an application launcher.
Shuffling windows around the screen and
# Test Driving Gnome3 on a Tablet (Surface Pro 3)
I have been using Kubuntu/KDE on my Surface Pro 3 for a while. I decided I wanted to try Ubuntu/Gnome3.
# Trust the Gnome
The Gnome3 team has designed a specific kind of workflow. I'm going to do my best to follow that workflow as much as possible. Trust the Gnome!
# Performance
Performance was fine on my Surface Pro 3. I have an i7 processor and 8GB of RAM. The desktop idled at about 1GB of RAM in use. I think this desktop would run well on most machines, but might be a stretch for really low end devices like Raspberry Pi. By the numbers, KDE provided slightly lower CPU/RAM utilization, but the difference was inconsequential for me.
# Touchability
Obviously I'm intending to use this primarily as a touch device. From this perspective, Gnome has a vastly better user interface. Double taps, tap and drag, and other gestures work far better and far more often in Gnome than in KDE.
Buttons and GUI elements are easily tappable, and once fractional display scaling was enabled I was able to fit a decent amount of content on-screen and still manipulate it effectively.
The default apps are well configured for touch screens. The file explorer was a particular pleasure. One exception was Firefox, which was not configured for touch at all. The recipe to fix that is widely available online. I suspect Canonical hasn't enabled touch in Firefox because Mozilla still considers it an experimental feature.
> To enable 2 finger scrolling, add `MOZ_USE_XINPUT2 DEFAULT=1` to `/etc/security/pam_env.conf`, then open about:config in Firefox, then set dom.w3c_touch_events.enabled to 1, then reboot.
Suggestions: None. This category is excellent.
# On-Screen Keyboard
Gnome has the best on-screen keyboard integration of any distro I've ever seen. Called the "caribou" keyboard (or perhaps forked from that project), this keyboard pops up any time you touch a text field with your finger. It looks clean and sharp and is a joy to tap on.
The joy is short lived, however, when you realize the keyboard is missing the control and alt key. Apparently that "isn't the purpose" of this keyboard. I wonder if the Gnome3 team will add this feature another day.
The keyboard had the following hiccups during my testing:
1. It would sometimes push windows up and off the screen, which sometimes created problems. No workaround.
2. It would cover the text input field in google hangouts. Workaround was to "pop out" the chat.
3. Sometimes it would not appear when desired. Swipe up from the bottom of the screen and it shall be summoned.
4. It was supremely annoying when using finger taps to set the cursor in a text document. The on-screen keyboard shouldn't appear if I have a keyboard active. The workaround is to temporarily disable it with the _"Block-Caribou"_ shell extension.
There is a temptation to use the onboard keyboard instead, but this is a non-starter. The activities view and the general process of switching workspaces causes the onboard keyboard to wig out. It is likely worth installing and configuring the onboard keyboard just in case you need the control and alt keys, but for the most part this will not be a better experience.
Suggestions for Improvement:
* Add control and alt keys.
* Add a setting to prevent pop-up keyboard from repositioning windows
* Add setting to block Caribou Keyboard when a valid physical keyboard is available.
* Add a setting to get rid of Caribou entirely, for users that don't want it.
# Pen Input
Gnome3 doesn't do anything special with pen input, as far as I can tell. That said, pen input works fine with no interference from the desktop environment. I was able to use apps like Xournal++ and Krita just fine.
# Window Management
I love Gnome Activities. Tapping the super key drops you into an "activities" view, where you can tap on any window to bring it to the forefront. You can also start typing and the "activities" view will instantly change into an application launcher.
Shuffling windows around the screen and
across workspaces is handled in a familiar way. You can dock windows left and right with super+{left/right}, maximize and restore with super+{up/down}, and move to the next workspace with control+shift+{up/down}.
I miss the ability to drag a window to a corner and turn it into a quartile.
Suggestions for improvement:
* Linux Mint Cinnamon edition has a peculiar window adjustment algorithm that will quartile windows if you use the super and arrow keys in the right context. I really think everyone should mimic that feature. (Example, super+right to move window to right half, then super+up to move window to top right quartile).
* Windows dragged to corners should turn into quartiles.
# Screen Rotation
Bonus points to Gnome for getting reliable screen rotation right! Nothing but compliments here.
# Settings
I found the setting offerings to be anemic. For example, I couldn't find a setting to change the two finger scrolling to be "down is down." I also couldn't find a setting to to set the inactivity lock screen timeout.
Even though the offerings in the settings menu was fairly limited, I also found it hard to navigate. In KDE, the settings menu is searchable, so even though there are a galaxy of options available, you rarely find yourself lost in the menus.
There also seemed to be significant errors in the keyboard shortcuts settings. For example, "move to workspace below" was listed as super+page down. This key combination didn't work, but control+alt+down did.
Suggestions:
* Add searchability to your settings menu
* Figure out what's wrong with keyboard shortcut settings
# File Explorer
Touch input works well enough most of the time. Every once in a while the file explorer stops responding to touch input, which is unfortunate.
There seem to be some "hidden" features, but over time I think I would learn to love this file explorer. For example, I saw no button to directly edit the current path, but control+l allows me to edit the path directly. Of course, this means the path editor is only available if a keyboard is plugged in.
The features I need are hidden in there. I was able to map SSHFS and SMB drives easily.
Since I am accepting "the Gnome workflow," I have to say I really like this file manager. Learning to do things in the way they were designed to be done is annoying at first, but ultimately quite pleasing when it all comes together.
# Suspend
I'm pretty sure this is more of an Ubuntu/Canonical thing than a Gnome3 thing, but suspend works really, really well. My only objection is it is a bit too easy to wake the tablet by pressing any key. The surface pro 3 has a capacitive "windows" button on the frame that wakes the tablet if you look at it funny.
The suspend/resume cycle is fast, almost as fast as on android.
Battery life persisted extremely well in the suspend state. My tablet has 2.5 hours of battery life (I have battery failure). Suspending the tablet overnight (8 hours) cost only 1 hour 40 minutes of battery life.
# Account Integration
By logging into your accounts using GNOME3, you can get your calendar to sync and add your cloud storage to the file explorer. Email has to be set up separately in thunderbird.
The calendar integrates with desktop notifications, which is a nice bonus.
# Stability
Ubuntu froze, crashed, but mostly recovered once during this test when I was trying to sync Thunderbird.
When my wifi failed (known issue on the SP3, I've now fixed it), Gnome remained stable. In KDE, frozen wifi would also freeze the taskbar elements, so Gnome wins here.
# Recommended User Modifications for Gnome3 on Tablet
1. Obviously, the user is responsible for sorting out hardware issues like wifi.
2. Install the Gnome-Tweaks tool and adjust as desired
3. Install the onboard keyboard to use as a backup. Install the block caribou shell extension just in case the keyboard is becoming a hassle.
4. Create a CLI symlink to the GUI GVFS mountpoints. `mkdir -p ~/mounts/; ln -s /run/user/$UID/gvfs/ ~/mounts/gvfs`. This will make it much easier to access remote locations mounted via the
I miss the ability to drag a window to a corner and turn it into a quartile.
Suggestions for improvement:
* Linux Mint Cinnamon edition has a peculiar window adjustment algorithm that will quartile windows if you use the super and arrow keys in the right context. I really think everyone should mimic that feature. (Example, super+right to move window to right half, then super+up to move window to top right quartile).
* Windows dragged to corners should turn into quartiles.
# Screen Rotation
Bonus points to Gnome for getting reliable screen rotation right! Nothing but compliments here.
# Settings
I found the setting offerings to be anemic. For example, I couldn't find a setting to change the two finger scrolling to be "down is down." I also couldn't find a setting to to set the inactivity lock screen timeout.
Even though the offerings in the settings menu was fairly limited, I also found it hard to navigate. In KDE, the settings menu is searchable, so even though there are a galaxy of options available, you rarely find yourself lost in the menus.
There also seemed to be significant errors in the keyboard shortcuts settings. For example, "move to workspace below" was listed as super+page down. This key combination didn't work, but control+alt+down did.
Suggestions:
* Add searchability to your settings menu
* Figure out what's wrong with keyboard shortcut settings
# File Explorer
Touch input works well enough most of the time. Every once in a while the file explorer stops responding to touch input, which is unfortunate.
There seem to be some "hidden" features, but over time I think I would learn to love this file explorer. For example, I saw no button to directly edit the current path, but control+l allows me to edit the path directly. Of course, this means the path editor is only available if a keyboard is plugged in.
The features I need are hidden in there. I was able to map SSHFS and SMB drives easily.
Since I am accepting "the Gnome workflow," I have to say I really like this file manager. Learning to do things in the way they were designed to be done is annoying at first, but ultimately quite pleasing when it all comes together.
# Suspend
I'm pretty sure this is more of an Ubuntu/Canonical thing than a Gnome3 thing, but suspend works really, really well. My only objection is it is a bit too easy to wake the tablet by pressing any key. The surface pro 3 has a capacitive "windows" button on the frame that wakes the tablet if you look at it funny.
The suspend/resume cycle is fast, almost as fast as on android.
Battery life persisted extremely well in the suspend state. My tablet has 2.5 hours of battery life (I have battery failure). Suspending the tablet overnight (8 hours) cost only 1 hour 40 minutes of battery life.
# Account Integration
By logging into your accounts using GNOME3, you can get your calendar to sync and add your cloud storage to the file explorer. Email has to be set up separately in thunderbird.
The calendar integrates with desktop notifications, which is a nice bonus.
# Stability
Ubuntu froze, crashed, but mostly recovered once during this test when I was trying to sync Thunderbird.
When my wifi failed (known issue on the SP3, I've now fixed it), Gnome remained stable. In KDE, frozen wifi would also freeze the taskbar elements, so Gnome wins here.
# Recommended User Modifications for Gnome3 on Tablet
1. Obviously, the user is responsible for sorting out hardware issues like wifi.
2. Install the Gnome-Tweaks tool and adjust as desired
3. Install the onboard keyboard to use as a backup. Install the block caribou shell extension just in case the keyboard is becoming a hassle.
4. Create a CLI symlink to the GUI GVFS mountpoints. `mkdir -p ~/mounts/; ln -s /run/user/$UID/gvfs/ ~/mounts/gvfs`. This will make it much easier to access remote locations mounted via the
file browser.
5. Install Xournal++ to take advantage of the pen input. Its the best writing system we have on Linux except maybe the OneNote browser app.
# Frustrations
After a week of testing, I keep running into the following problems:
1. Touch stops working. Rotating the screen sometimes brings it back, sometimes it doesn't.
2. File browser intermittently fails to accept touch input.
# Surface Pro 3
If you're curious about the Surface Pro 3 as a linux device, here are my general impressions:
* 12 inches is too big for a tablet.
* The form factor makes for a particularly lightweight and portable laptop, but it is also difficult to use _in your lap_.
* While I've gotten Wifi to be very stable... It isn't 100%. After the device sleeps, wifi often fails until the device reboots.
* Gnome3 is the best Linux touchscreen environment, but it isn't good enough for me to ditch other proprietary options like Android, iOS, and ChromeOS.
# Conclusion
Compared to KDE, Gnome3 offers a much improved touchscreen experience. Compared to Android, iOS, and ChromeOS, Gnome3 leaves much to be desired. While I will always prefer FOSS software, I don't think I'm ready to switch to Gnome for my tablet of choice.
https://redd.it/fux4n6
@r_linux
5. Install Xournal++ to take advantage of the pen input. Its the best writing system we have on Linux except maybe the OneNote browser app.
# Frustrations
After a week of testing, I keep running into the following problems:
1. Touch stops working. Rotating the screen sometimes brings it back, sometimes it doesn't.
2. File browser intermittently fails to accept touch input.
# Surface Pro 3
If you're curious about the Surface Pro 3 as a linux device, here are my general impressions:
* 12 inches is too big for a tablet.
* The form factor makes for a particularly lightweight and portable laptop, but it is also difficult to use _in your lap_.
* While I've gotten Wifi to be very stable... It isn't 100%. After the device sleeps, wifi often fails until the device reboots.
* Gnome3 is the best Linux touchscreen environment, but it isn't good enough for me to ditch other proprietary options like Android, iOS, and ChromeOS.
# Conclusion
Compared to KDE, Gnome3 offers a much improved touchscreen experience. Compared to Android, iOS, and ChromeOS, Gnome3 leaves much to be desired. While I will always prefer FOSS software, I don't think I'm ready to switch to Gnome for my tablet of choice.
https://redd.it/fux4n6
@r_linux
reddit
Test Driving Gnome3 on a Tablet (Surface Pro 3)
# Test Driving Gnome3 on a Tablet (Surface Pro 3) I have been using Kubuntu/KDE on my Surface Pro 3 for a while. I decided I wanted to try...
Add 1st Party Support for AdBlock Plus-style blocklists in Gecko/GeckoView
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1519197
https://redd.it/fuxxmw
@r_linux
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1519197
https://redd.it/fuxxmw
@r_linux
bugzilla.mozilla.org
1519197 - Add 1st Party Support for AdBlock Plus-style blocklists in Gecko/GeckoView
NEW (nobody) in Toolkit - Safe Browsing. Last updated 2020-02-03.
Network traffic monitoring + Grafana graphs for every IP on the LAN, including the internet servers they connect to (open source)
The internet is slow here in isolation, so I [built a traffic monitor for our network](https://www.technicallywizardry.com/traffic-monitoring-software-grafana/?preview=true&_thumbnail_id=8906).
Takeaways...
* Python noscript, also available as a Docker container (arm & x86)
* Uses tcpdump on a bridged interface router to report `bytes` and `packets` to Prometheus, tagged with `src`, `dst`, `service`, and `proto`
* Although the RPi acts as a router, it actually **sped up** (!!) our internet (pppoeconf is better than a crappy DSL modem).
* I also implemented connection bonding, so we can plug in a phone to the USB and it will speed the connection further.
* [Network diagram](https://content.technicallywizardry.com/2020/04/04173149/Network-Traffic-Metrics-2048x1464.png)
* [Grafana dashboard](https://content.technicallywizardry.com/2020/04/04181049/Screen-Shot-2020-04-04-at-11.48.22-AM-2048x1929.png)
* [Github repository](https://github.com/zaneclaes/network-traffic-metrics)
... but I'm not truly a networking expert, so tell me what I did wrong :p
https://redd.it/fuyyba
@r_linux
The internet is slow here in isolation, so I [built a traffic monitor for our network](https://www.technicallywizardry.com/traffic-monitoring-software-grafana/?preview=true&_thumbnail_id=8906).
Takeaways...
* Python noscript, also available as a Docker container (arm & x86)
* Uses tcpdump on a bridged interface router to report `bytes` and `packets` to Prometheus, tagged with `src`, `dst`, `service`, and `proto`
* Although the RPi acts as a router, it actually **sped up** (!!) our internet (pppoeconf is better than a crappy DSL modem).
* I also implemented connection bonding, so we can plug in a phone to the USB and it will speed the connection further.
* [Network diagram](https://content.technicallywizardry.com/2020/04/04173149/Network-Traffic-Metrics-2048x1464.png)
* [Grafana dashboard](https://content.technicallywizardry.com/2020/04/04181049/Screen-Shot-2020-04-04-at-11.48.22-AM-2048x1929.png)
* [Github repository](https://github.com/zaneclaes/network-traffic-metrics)
... but I'm not truly a networking expert, so tell me what I did wrong :p
https://redd.it/fuyyba
@r_linux
Technically Wizardry
Traffic Monitoring Software with Grafana — Technically Wizardry
When trying to diagnose why the internet is slow, it can be quite challenging to figure out exactly which device on the network is eating up all the bandwidth. Many solutions to this problem require software to be installed on every device to be monitored.…