menu will now update any secondary windows.
* Added new tags: Snowshoe and Paddleboard.
* The people database (Settings/Configure.../People) now has columns for age and maximum heart rate.
* There are new track columns for min/avg/max heart rate as a % of maximum, if set as above. This information will also be displayed in track tooltips.
* Upon track import, the selected active person will now be applied to the track, so person-specific power, energy, and HR data will be displayed. Previously this required a restart or re-selection of the active person.
* External links in the in-program documentation browser will now open in your desktop's defined external browser. For example, Perl-style regular expressions now link to online Perl documentation.
* Documentation browser improvements: forward and back buttons, and hover-text for external URLs.
* On-disk geopolitical data now uses a custom binary format to remove the Arch build warnings about deprecated Qt APIs. This is also faster to parse.
* There are now translation files for 19 languages in the 'translations' directory of the source tree. These can be used with Qt's "linguist" tool for localizations.
* Added batch tile download dialog, with limited tile count. Please respect server bandwidth.
https://redd.it/kn90l7
@r_linux
* Added new tags: Snowshoe and Paddleboard.
* The people database (Settings/Configure.../People) now has columns for age and maximum heart rate.
* There are new track columns for min/avg/max heart rate as a % of maximum, if set as above. This information will also be displayed in track tooltips.
* Upon track import, the selected active person will now be applied to the track, so person-specific power, energy, and HR data will be displayed. Previously this required a restart or re-selection of the active person.
* External links in the in-program documentation browser will now open in your desktop's defined external browser. For example, Perl-style regular expressions now link to online Perl documentation.
* Documentation browser improvements: forward and back buttons, and hover-text for external URLs.
* On-disk geopolitical data now uses a custom binary format to remove the Arch build warnings about deprecated Qt APIs. This is also faster to parse.
* There are now translation files for 19 languages in the 'translations' directory of the source tree. These can be used with Qt's "linguist" tool for localizations.
* Added batch tile download dialog, with limited tile count. Please respect server bandwidth.
https://redd.it/kn90l7
@r_linux
reddit
ZombieTrackerGPS 1.05
Version 1.05 of ZombieTrackerGPS (*Winterbike Edition*) has been released, with several new features based on user requests and feedback. ZTGPS...
Happy Linux user
Because I have seen many "Goodbye Linux I am back to Windows" posts, I felt an urge to counteract, and post a positive review.
I have been using Linux since 2016 when I got my last laptop, because I hated Windows 8. I haven't use Windows since then, even at work (back-end developer), after changed employer twice. My current distro is Debian, because I couldn't continue using Linux Mint and sound professional :) Our servers are all Debian so it works perfectly for me. I do need to manually compile/install fresh software sometimes.
I know some people might be wondering whether they would need to log back and forth to Windows: well not for me: all tools I need (VPN, IDEs, remote desktop clients, databases, packages...). Obviously I often I use web clients instead of desktop applications (internal messaging, video call software etc..), so this alleviates the need to manually install anything even further. It also happened to me that some of libraries we used (optical character recognition) were only available under Linux, so my less lucky colleagues had to docker/VMs.
I hear people saying that using Linux implies a learning curve: true, but not only everything I learnt is directly related to my work, but I also enjoy it. ACTUALLY owning my laptop, and being THE admin is the way.
Some people say that Linux is "only for nerds/ developers". This is not true, I actually have a business background (but that time is over).
Being able to use Linux is kinda a privilege, and I am happy to be privileged :)
https://redd.it/knalkt
@r_linux
Because I have seen many "Goodbye Linux I am back to Windows" posts, I felt an urge to counteract, and post a positive review.
I have been using Linux since 2016 when I got my last laptop, because I hated Windows 8. I haven't use Windows since then, even at work (back-end developer), after changed employer twice. My current distro is Debian, because I couldn't continue using Linux Mint and sound professional :) Our servers are all Debian so it works perfectly for me. I do need to manually compile/install fresh software sometimes.
I know some people might be wondering whether they would need to log back and forth to Windows: well not for me: all tools I need (VPN, IDEs, remote desktop clients, databases, packages...). Obviously I often I use web clients instead of desktop applications (internal messaging, video call software etc..), so this alleviates the need to manually install anything even further. It also happened to me that some of libraries we used (optical character recognition) were only available under Linux, so my less lucky colleagues had to docker/VMs.
I hear people saying that using Linux implies a learning curve: true, but not only everything I learnt is directly related to my work, but I also enjoy it. ACTUALLY owning my laptop, and being THE admin is the way.
Some people say that Linux is "only for nerds/ developers". This is not true, I actually have a business background (but that time is over).
Being able to use Linux is kinda a privilege, and I am happy to be privileged :)
https://redd.it/knalkt
@r_linux
reddit
Happy Linux user
Because I have seen many "Goodbye Linux I am back to Windows" posts, I felt an urge to counteract, and post a positive review. I have been using...
Accidentally deleted my windows partitions
Accidentally deleted my windows partitions
My windows PC runs a dual boot alongside side Ubuntu Linux...
Trying to repair a thumb drive i deleted all partitions but the one Linux is running on...
Pls how do I undo this??
https://redd.it/kn9skh
@r_linux
Accidentally deleted my windows partitions
My windows PC runs a dual boot alongside side Ubuntu Linux...
Trying to repair a thumb drive i deleted all partitions but the one Linux is running on...
Pls how do I undo this??
https://redd.it/kn9skh
@r_linux
reddit
Accidentally deleted my windows partitions
Accidentally deleted my windows partitions My windows PC runs a dual boot alongside side Ubuntu Linux... Trying to repair a thumb drive i...
Security by sandboxing: Firejail vs bubblewrap vs other alternatives
Did you ever do "npm install" or "pip install" and having a slightly bad feeling about executing the resulting code? What if there is malware hiding in one of the packages?
Most programs a user starts run with the full permission of the user. While it's good that this is not root, all the important and irreplaceable files you own are accessible. A backup is nice, but what if a library you downloaded copies your ssh keys or your password manager files?
That's where sandboxing comes into play: Deno does it out-of-the-box, but what if you use something else? Node.js or Python?
So I searched for possibilities: something sufficiently secure, but still convenient enough to be used.
This is a short summary about what I found incl. a short test-example of bubblewrap and firejail.
TL;DR: I use firejail to run untrustworthy code. It's reasonably secure, simple to use and allows me to easily limit what programs can access (files and network mainly). bubblewrap works too, but it's less convenient for my taste.
https://redd.it/knjzf2
@r_linux
Did you ever do "npm install" or "pip install" and having a slightly bad feeling about executing the resulting code? What if there is malware hiding in one of the packages?
Most programs a user starts run with the full permission of the user. While it's good that this is not root, all the important and irreplaceable files you own are accessible. A backup is nice, but what if a library you downloaded copies your ssh keys or your password manager files?
That's where sandboxing comes into play: Deno does it out-of-the-box, but what if you use something else? Node.js or Python?
So I searched for possibilities: something sufficiently secure, but still convenient enough to be used.
This is a short summary about what I found incl. a short test-example of bubblewrap and firejail.
TL;DR: I use firejail to run untrustworthy code. It's reasonably secure, simple to use and allows me to easily limit what programs can access (files and network mainly). bubblewrap works too, but it's less convenient for my taste.
https://redd.it/knjzf2
@r_linux
Harald's Random Stuff
Comparing Sandboxing Tools
Comparing some tools to make it less dangerous to run code you did not write. Sandboxing seems to be the best way to go like Deno and wasmtime do. But what about Python, Node.js, etc.? firejail see…
This week in matrix brings a new GroupMe bridge, a native KDE client, and more
https://matrix.org/blog/2020/12/30/this-week-in-matrix-2020-12-30/
https://redd.it/knd604
@r_linux
https://matrix.org/blog/2020/12/30/this-week-in-matrix-2020-12-30/
https://redd.it/knd604
@r_linux
Linux Web browsers
I really want to use a web browser like Gnome web or Falkon instead of using Firefox and I love their simplicity but my only deception is their ad block, I have been using Firefox with the right ad blocks for so long that I didn't remember that ads even existed until I tried to surf with Gnome web and Falkon...how is it possible to surf this way, am I missing something ?
https://redd.it/knlngs
@r_linux
I really want to use a web browser like Gnome web or Falkon instead of using Firefox and I love their simplicity but my only deception is their ad block, I have been using Firefox with the right ad blocks for so long that I didn't remember that ads even existed until I tried to surf with Gnome web and Falkon...how is it possible to surf this way, am I missing something ?
https://redd.it/knlngs
@r_linux
reddit
Linux Web browsers
I really want to use a web browser like Gnome web or Falkon instead of using Firefox and I love their simplicity but my only deception is their ad...
What do people like Richard stallman do on the internet?
So Richard stallman doesn’t use a lot of stuff because they run proprietary stuff and because of privacy concerns. He has articles detailing why he won’t use Amazon , Google and Microsoft and a lot of other companies.
So how does he use the internet. Sure you can host your own email and that’s probably what he does but the rest of the internet runs off of AWS, GCP and azure. So that’s off limits for him. He doesn’t even run non free JavaScript code. So I doubt he’d use these large cloud platforms. I mean even alternative search engines run off of AWS or GCP or something. So does he not search the web or something? Like what can you do when you restrict yourself this much?
https://redd.it/knnij0
@r_linux
So Richard stallman doesn’t use a lot of stuff because they run proprietary stuff and because of privacy concerns. He has articles detailing why he won’t use Amazon , Google and Microsoft and a lot of other companies.
So how does he use the internet. Sure you can host your own email and that’s probably what he does but the rest of the internet runs off of AWS, GCP and azure. So that’s off limits for him. He doesn’t even run non free JavaScript code. So I doubt he’d use these large cloud platforms. I mean even alternative search engines run off of AWS or GCP or something. So does he not search the web or something? Like what can you do when you restrict yourself this much?
https://redd.it/knnij0
@r_linux
reddit
What do people like Richard stallman do on the internet?
So Richard stallman doesn’t use a lot of stuff because they run proprietary stuff and because of privacy concerns. He has articles detailing why...
Linux Foundation Public Health?
I was unaware until now that the Linux Foundation has teamed up with IBM, Cisco and Tencent (among others) to make vaccination verification software under a new banner. Some refer to this as a 'covid passport'
Do developers at large have any apprehension about this? IBM/RedHat just cancelled the most widely used enterprise linux Distro (CentOS) and now they are creating software limitations for physical travel with China's primary telecom.
Thoughts?
Though it may be called open source, it's implementation will most definitely not advocate freedom.
See:
https://www.lfph.io/2020/07/20/tech-leaders-and-health-authorities-from-around-the-globe-collaborate-to-combat-covid-19/
https://redd.it/knnlgg
@r_linux
I was unaware until now that the Linux Foundation has teamed up with IBM, Cisco and Tencent (among others) to make vaccination verification software under a new banner. Some refer to this as a 'covid passport'
Do developers at large have any apprehension about this? IBM/RedHat just cancelled the most widely used enterprise linux Distro (CentOS) and now they are creating software limitations for physical travel with China's primary telecom.
Thoughts?
Though it may be called open source, it's implementation will most definitely not advocate freedom.
See:
https://www.lfph.io/2020/07/20/tech-leaders-and-health-authorities-from-around-the-globe-collaborate-to-combat-covid-19/
https://redd.it/knnlgg
@r_linux
Linux Foundation Public Health
Tech leaders and health authorities from around the globe collaborate to combat COVID-19 - Linux Foundation Public Health
Linux Foundation Public Health launches with open source exposure notification apps being deployed in Ireland, Canada, and multiple U.S. states.
First time on Linux— with Arch!
I’ve been on the other two operating system (W10 and macOS) and recently decided to switch to Linux! (in a VM because I still need W10 for school related reasons) I had heard a lot of things about Arch (and that it was a pretty good Distro but “hard” to install). So I wanted to give it a try myself! Installed the base and the basic DE and GUI in about 2 tries each (I messed up the configs in the base install and didn’t know what GUI elements I needed to install) but after that it was a huge success! Didn’t find the installation hard at all (lucky?).
Anyways,
I love the concept of OpenSource and Linux so I am excited to be on this community!
:)
https://redd.it/knouhm
@r_linux
I’ve been on the other two operating system (W10 and macOS) and recently decided to switch to Linux! (in a VM because I still need W10 for school related reasons) I had heard a lot of things about Arch (and that it was a pretty good Distro but “hard” to install). So I wanted to give it a try myself! Installed the base and the basic DE and GUI in about 2 tries each (I messed up the configs in the base install and didn’t know what GUI elements I needed to install) but after that it was a huge success! Didn’t find the installation hard at all (lucky?).
Anyways,
I love the concept of OpenSource and Linux so I am excited to be on this community!
:)
https://redd.it/knouhm
@r_linux
reddit
First time on Linux— with Arch!
I’ve been on the other two operating system (W10 and macOS) and recently decided to switch to Linux! (in a VM because I still need W10 for school...
A message from the FSF president for the year-end
https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/fsf-fights-to-secure-software-freedom-for-future-generations
https://redd.it/kn8bz4
@r_linux
https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/fsf-fights-to-secure-software-freedom-for-future-generations
https://redd.it/kn8bz4
@r_linux
www.fsf.org
FSF fights to secure software freedom for future generations
Volker Krause looks back at the evolution of KDE Itinerary through 2020 and how KDE's travel assistant is growing to cover, not only public transport, but also accessibility info, opening hours of facilities at train and bus stations, and much more
https://www.volkerkrause.eu/2020/12/26/kde-wrapping-up-2020.html
https://redd.it/knpjq8
@r_linux
https://www.volkerkrause.eu/2020/12/26/kde-wrapping-up-2020.html
https://redd.it/knpjq8
@r_linux
www.volkerkrause.eu
Wrapping up 2020 and looking forward to 2021
As 2020 comes to a close, there’s several things ongoing around KDE Itinerary which a year ago I would have considered out of reach, or simply didn’t have on...
The Kate Text Editor in 2020
https://kate-editor.org/post/2020/2020-12-31-kate-in-2020/
https://redd.it/knqajs
@r_linux
https://kate-editor.org/post/2020/2020-12-31-kate-in-2020/
https://redd.it/knqajs
@r_linux
Kate
The Kate Text Editor in 2020
2020 was for sure no good year for most people around the world. A lot of us are affected directly or indirectly by the currently still raging COVID-19 pandemic. Let’s hope that 2021 will bring better fortune at least in this aspect.
Still, good stuff happened…
Still, good stuff happened…
Live Photos support?
I am planning to sync my apple photos library to my Linux desktop, I am backing up/syncing my photos with Nextcloud and it supports apple’s Live photos format.
My question: is there any photos management/edit software in Linux distros that supports apple’s live photos format?
https://redd.it/knqyji
@r_linux
I am planning to sync my apple photos library to my Linux desktop, I am backing up/syncing my photos with Nextcloud and it supports apple’s Live photos format.
My question: is there any photos management/edit software in Linux distros that supports apple’s live photos format?
https://redd.it/knqyji
@r_linux
reddit
Live Photos support?
I am planning to sync my apple photos library to my Linux desktop, I am backing up/syncing my photos with Nextcloud and it supports apple’s Live...
FOSS and Linux 2020 accomplishments and major events.
2020 was a crazy year, but I wanted to see what everyone thinks about Linux and FOSS in general in 2020.
Overall I have the perception that not a lot of major stuff happened, which is great news. Everything iteratively improved, but was pretty stable all around.
One call out I'd make is that the AMD launches this year were solid. Normally there is an unstable period between hardware release and when it's running well, but the RX 6000 series gpus and ryzen 5000 series cpus were pretty much without issue from everything I read (it'd be nice to actually get my hands on a new GPU at msrp ..... ).
What do you all think about the last year?
https://redd.it/knulob
@r_linux
2020 was a crazy year, but I wanted to see what everyone thinks about Linux and FOSS in general in 2020.
Overall I have the perception that not a lot of major stuff happened, which is great news. Everything iteratively improved, but was pretty stable all around.
One call out I'd make is that the AMD launches this year were solid. Normally there is an unstable period between hardware release and when it's running well, but the RX 6000 series gpus and ryzen 5000 series cpus were pretty much without issue from everything I read (it'd be nice to actually get my hands on a new GPU at msrp ..... ).
What do you all think about the last year?
https://redd.it/knulob
@r_linux
reddit
FOSS and Linux 2020 accomplishments and major events.
2020 was a crazy year, but I wanted to see what everyone thinks about Linux and FOSS in general in 2020. Overall I have the perception that not a...
Your Top 100% O/S Editor/IDE Suggestion
Requesting recommendations of 100% (from code repository all the way to distribution) open source editors and/or IDEs for most if not all one's web development needs, and importantly, WHY you use it over any other open source options.
In a nutshell, this stems from me beginning to see just how important open source is now as well as how important it is to preserve and expand it into the future. I'd like to do my work on tools that I could potentially directly contribute to in the future and at least give feedback to now, among many other reasons.
To be clear, I'm not looking for a philosophical, what is or isn't open source, debate, or any debate at all.
But to clarify for the sake of accurate recommendations to this specific topic:
I am personally not satisfied with the "open source" nature of many projects purporting to be open source, and I find myself not being excited for how advanced any of these IDEs may become because of their amazing proprietary telemetry among other things.
So, that is where I'm coming from and what I'm looking for so please school me (and whoever may also find this useful) on any and all completely open source options for editors and/or IDEs as well as any crucial peripheral tools (e.g. there are some extensions that essentially MAKE VSCode useful and even ideal for certain types of development).
I haven't found a thread exactly like this in my search so hoping it could be useful.
Thank you ahead of time to anyone that shares.
https://redd.it/knw8sq
@r_linux
Requesting recommendations of 100% (from code repository all the way to distribution) open source editors and/or IDEs for most if not all one's web development needs, and importantly, WHY you use it over any other open source options.
In a nutshell, this stems from me beginning to see just how important open source is now as well as how important it is to preserve and expand it into the future. I'd like to do my work on tools that I could potentially directly contribute to in the future and at least give feedback to now, among many other reasons.
To be clear, I'm not looking for a philosophical, what is or isn't open source, debate, or any debate at all.
But to clarify for the sake of accurate recommendations to this specific topic:
I am personally not satisfied with the "open source" nature of many projects purporting to be open source, and I find myself not being excited for how advanced any of these IDEs may become because of their amazing proprietary telemetry among other things.
So, that is where I'm coming from and what I'm looking for so please school me (and whoever may also find this useful) on any and all completely open source options for editors and/or IDEs as well as any crucial peripheral tools (e.g. there are some extensions that essentially MAKE VSCode useful and even ideal for certain types of development).
I haven't found a thread exactly like this in my search so hoping it could be useful.
Thank you ahead of time to anyone that shares.
https://redd.it/knw8sq
@r_linux
reddit
Your Top 100% O/S Editor/IDE Suggestion
Requesting recommendations of 100% (from code repository all the way to distribution) open source editors and/or IDEs for most if not all one's...
Budget software recommendations?
Right now I use Mint on my phone, but I find that it doesn't have the reports I want, so I'm looking for a better solution, and where better to look than FOSS? I've tried Skrooge and Homebank, but they seem to need you to add every transaction/operation manually, whereas Mint automatically syncs the transactions of all linked accounts. Does anyone have a recommendation for software that also can automatically sync transaction history with the accounts you link?
https://redd.it/knxxx6
@r_linux
Right now I use Mint on my phone, but I find that it doesn't have the reports I want, so I'm looking for a better solution, and where better to look than FOSS? I've tried Skrooge and Homebank, but they seem to need you to add every transaction/operation manually, whereas Mint automatically syncs the transactions of all linked accounts. Does anyone have a recommendation for software that also can automatically sync transaction history with the accounts you link?
https://redd.it/knxxx6
@r_linux
reddit
Budget software recommendations?
Right now I use Mint on my phone, but I find that it doesn't have the reports I want, so I'm looking for a better solution, and where better to...
"Viewing source code isn’t tied to elevation of risk"
I know this won't change anything. Microsoft will still be Microsoft. Windows will still stay closed source. Embrace, extend, extinguish?
Anyway, it's funny to see Microsoft admitting this after being hacked.
https://redd.it/knxr11
@r_linux
I know this won't change anything. Microsoft will still be Microsoft. Windows will still stay closed source. Embrace, extend, extinguish?
Anyway, it's funny to see Microsoft admitting this after being hacked.
https://redd.it/knxr11
@r_linux
reddit
"Viewing source code isn’t tied to elevation of risk"
I know this won't change anything. Microsoft will still be Microsoft. Windows will still stay closed source. Embrace, extend, extinguish? Anyway,...
Hey! Just created a new zsh-vi-mode plugin, don't you want to have a try?
It's a totally very fresh release and maybe you'll like it, faster switching speed between normal mode and insert mode, and faster key response, bring you to real life, anyway welcome to be the early adopter, please upvote by commenting this post, many thanks for you (vimers). 😀 Happy new year everyone!
https://github.com/jeffreytse/zsh-vi-mode
## Features
Cursor movement (Navigation).
Insert & Replace (Insert mode).
Text Objects.
Searching text.
Undo, Redo, Cut, Copy, Paste, and Delete.
Surrounds (Add, Replace, Delete, and Move Around, Highlight).
Switch keywords (Increase/Decrease Number, Boolean, etc. In progress).
...
https://redd.it/knmahb
@r_linux
It's a totally very fresh release and maybe you'll like it, faster switching speed between normal mode and insert mode, and faster key response, bring you to real life, anyway welcome to be the early adopter, please upvote by commenting this post, many thanks for you (vimers). 😀 Happy new year everyone!
https://github.com/jeffreytse/zsh-vi-mode
## Features
Cursor movement (Navigation).
Insert & Replace (Insert mode).
Text Objects.
Searching text.
Undo, Redo, Cut, Copy, Paste, and Delete.
Surrounds (Add, Replace, Delete, and Move Around, Highlight).
Switch keywords (Increase/Decrease Number, Boolean, etc. In progress).
...
https://redd.it/knmahb
@r_linux
GitHub
GitHub - jeffreytse/zsh-vi-mode: 💻 A better and friendly vi(vim) mode plugin for ZSH.
💻 A better and friendly vi(vim) mode plugin for ZSH. - jeffreytse/zsh-vi-mode
Kali Linux + Mr. Robot ARG Society
https://www.kali.org/news/mr-robot-arg-society/
https://redd.it/knoj4k
@r_linux
https://www.kali.org/news/mr-robot-arg-society/
https://redd.it/knoj4k
@r_linux
Kali Linux
Kali Linux + Mr. Robot ARG Society | Kali Linux Blog
Many of you may have known about the show Mr Robot and its unique connection to Kali Linux. But there is a little bit more that we have not talked about due to NDAs. But it appears the mystery is over, the red tape has been removed, and we now wanted to take…