Happy 29th birthday to KDE! – Adventures in Linux and KDE
https://pointieststick.com/2025/10/16/happy-29th-birthday-to-kde/
https://redd.it/1o8io1q
@r_linux
https://pointieststick.com/2025/10/16/happy-29th-birthday-to-kde/
https://redd.it/1o8io1q
@r_linux
Adventures in Linux and KDE
Happy 29th birthday to KDE!
This week marks KDE’s 29th birthday, which is pretty special. Did you know KDE has been around longer than Google, PayPal, Facebook, Instagram, Netflix, Tesla, Spotify, Uber, VMware, LinkedIn…
Text Editor like Cool Retro Terminal
Hi everyone, I was wondering if there is a Text Editor for Linux that has the same charm as Cool Retro Terminal... so with a retro interface and colors (green phosphors, or amber) and a nice filter that simulates the cathode ray tube. Do you know anything?
https://redd.it/1o8g4fn
@r_linux
Hi everyone, I was wondering if there is a Text Editor for Linux that has the same charm as Cool Retro Terminal... so with a retro interface and colors (green phosphors, or amber) and a nice filter that simulates the cathode ray tube. Do you know anything?
https://redd.it/1o8g4fn
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the linux community
A Crucial Time for Linux
This is my call to the entire Linux community. First some backstory. I am writing this from my Samsung NC10 with an Intel Atom N270 i686 architecture CPU and (barely) 1GB of RAM, running Debian 12 with xfce. I decided to install Linux on this machine to see if I could make use out of this old netbook, and with the end of support for Win10 I thought it would be a good idea to dabble around with Linux.
I started this project about two weeks ago. I tried to install Arch first because I wanted to be a hackerman like that. Unfortunately me being a noob probably caused the install to fail multiple times, yet I've learned a lot about partitioning and mirrors and all that fun stuff. I have since moved on to Debian which was a much more noob friendly install and it's running pretty great. I have since decided to give this laptop a musical use (which I still have to experiment with).
I have learned a lot in these two weeks and there are a few things I would like to share from a newbie perspective.
* End of native 32-bit support on Linux
Writing this post to you from a 32-bit i686 architecture machine speaks of the great versatility of GNU/Linux. I have since learned that this support will be coming to an end in the near future. I hope this will be reconsidered. The efforts put in these systems are not in vain! Keeping this support going will keep old systems like the one I'm writing from useful and thereby potentially save a lot of machines turning into E-waste (don't be like Microsoft).
* OS Exodus
With Win10 support ending and a lot of people having Microsoft fatigue there is a substantial migration to Linux. This is the time for developers of all sorts to be on top of their game. Every effort to make Linux user friendly and more compatible with crucial hardware and software has the potential to build the user base that Linux has been waiting for. When Linux will have won over a substantial user base, the "pro" creative applications (Adobe, DAW's, etc.) might follow to cater to these users. (Yet I hope that open-source alternatives will break the power of some of these companies)
* On device tutorials
The learning curve is real. Personally I enjoyed diving in deep and figuring out how to make the most of this stupendously outdated and under-powered (from the start) system. Yet whenever I would write "help' in different parts of the terminal it didn't help me much. It obviously gave me overviews of different commands and functions, yet it usually wasn't clear to me what they did. Maybe a 'tutorial' command can become a standard. Obviously I also think that graphical tutorials would be very welcome to new users that don't want to dive into the terminal. Including for the installation process.
I hope my noob insights will inspire. Thank you to those who took the time to read through the whole thing. I'm very curious about your thoughts and feedback.
https://redd.it/1o8lhsm
@r_linux
This is my call to the entire Linux community. First some backstory. I am writing this from my Samsung NC10 with an Intel Atom N270 i686 architecture CPU and (barely) 1GB of RAM, running Debian 12 with xfce. I decided to install Linux on this machine to see if I could make use out of this old netbook, and with the end of support for Win10 I thought it would be a good idea to dabble around with Linux.
I started this project about two weeks ago. I tried to install Arch first because I wanted to be a hackerman like that. Unfortunately me being a noob probably caused the install to fail multiple times, yet I've learned a lot about partitioning and mirrors and all that fun stuff. I have since moved on to Debian which was a much more noob friendly install and it's running pretty great. I have since decided to give this laptop a musical use (which I still have to experiment with).
I have learned a lot in these two weeks and there are a few things I would like to share from a newbie perspective.
* End of native 32-bit support on Linux
Writing this post to you from a 32-bit i686 architecture machine speaks of the great versatility of GNU/Linux. I have since learned that this support will be coming to an end in the near future. I hope this will be reconsidered. The efforts put in these systems are not in vain! Keeping this support going will keep old systems like the one I'm writing from useful and thereby potentially save a lot of machines turning into E-waste (don't be like Microsoft).
* OS Exodus
With Win10 support ending and a lot of people having Microsoft fatigue there is a substantial migration to Linux. This is the time for developers of all sorts to be on top of their game. Every effort to make Linux user friendly and more compatible with crucial hardware and software has the potential to build the user base that Linux has been waiting for. When Linux will have won over a substantial user base, the "pro" creative applications (Adobe, DAW's, etc.) might follow to cater to these users. (Yet I hope that open-source alternatives will break the power of some of these companies)
* On device tutorials
The learning curve is real. Personally I enjoyed diving in deep and figuring out how to make the most of this stupendously outdated and under-powered (from the start) system. Yet whenever I would write "help' in different parts of the terminal it didn't help me much. It obviously gave me overviews of different commands and functions, yet it usually wasn't clear to me what they did. Maybe a 'tutorial' command can become a standard. Obviously I also think that graphical tutorials would be very welcome to new users that don't want to dive into the terminal. Including for the installation process.
I hope my noob insights will inspire. Thank you to those who took the time to read through the whole thing. I'm very curious about your thoughts and feedback.
https://redd.it/1o8lhsm
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the linux community
Can I use a bootable USB Linux to inspect and test a machine with no HD/SSD?
Hey friends. I've been using different flavors of Unix and Linux for over 30 years, but haven't really administered or set it up on a PC in the modern era.
I was recently gifted a fairly powerful PC, without any drive in it. I believe that I should be able to boot it from a USB stick with a simple Linux that I could use to just look around and get info about the CPU, GPU, and RAM. I'd rather do that than open the case and try to find stickers and labels on stuff.
If anyone has advice or pointers on what I'd use for this, I'd really appreciate it
https://redd.it/1o8rm4n
@r_linux
Hey friends. I've been using different flavors of Unix and Linux for over 30 years, but haven't really administered or set it up on a PC in the modern era.
I was recently gifted a fairly powerful PC, without any drive in it. I believe that I should be able to boot it from a USB stick with a simple Linux that I could use to just look around and get info about the CPU, GPU, and RAM. I'd rather do that than open the case and try to find stickers and labels on stuff.
If anyone has advice or pointers on what I'd use for this, I'd really appreciate it
https://redd.it/1o8rm4n
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the linux community
Konsole making new lines
I'm running debian (trixie) with kde plasma and wayland, I recently started using krohnkite with it cuz it looks interesting but I realize that konsole would start a new line everytime I resize using krohnkite, (I'm using ohmyzsh if that is relevant), is there any fix for this and would there be another terminal that you would recommend?
https://redd.it/1o8w7am
@r_linux
I'm running debian (trixie) with kde plasma and wayland, I recently started using krohnkite with it cuz it looks interesting but I realize that konsole would start a new line everytime I resize using krohnkite, (I'm using ohmyzsh if that is relevant), is there any fix for this and would there be another terminal that you would recommend?
https://redd.it/1o8w7am
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the linux community
New Linux Kernel Patches From Intel Delivering +18% Database Performance
https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-MM-CID-Faster-DBs
https://redd.it/1o8z5jt
@r_linux
https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-MM-CID-Faster-DBs
https://redd.it/1o8z5jt
@r_linux
Phoronix
New Linux Kernel Patches From Intel Delivering +18% Database Performance
In addition to the recent Linux kernel patches out of Intel for Cache Aware Scheduling for better performance, separately, another interesting new patch series was sent out this week for the Linux kernel
Switched to mint! (Finally)
Im proud of myself for finally plunging myself in linux mint!!! My friend helped me a shit ton on setting up and they dont seem to finished (at least not yet) but i am so grateful i switched, unfortunately no i didn't dual boot it with windows (too much bugs :( ) so im diving right in ig lol
Honestly, the main reason i switched is cuz of the EOL of win10, not being able to switch to 11 and just, the want to customize/rice my laptop so it can truly be, my own pc :3
So yeah! Uhh wish me luck? Idk man but overall hopefully my schoolwork doesn't get fucked cuz of dis
https://redd.it/1o900kl
@r_linux
Im proud of myself for finally plunging myself in linux mint!!! My friend helped me a shit ton on setting up and they dont seem to finished (at least not yet) but i am so grateful i switched, unfortunately no i didn't dual boot it with windows (too much bugs :( ) so im diving right in ig lol
Honestly, the main reason i switched is cuz of the EOL of win10, not being able to switch to 11 and just, the want to customize/rice my laptop so it can truly be, my own pc :3
So yeah! Uhh wish me luck? Idk man but overall hopefully my schoolwork doesn't get fucked cuz of dis
https://redd.it/1o900kl
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the linux community
Could not make chicago95 work. then updated Fedora to 43, installed XFCE, and got jumpscared with chicago95
https://redd.it/1o93m3u
@r_linux
https://redd.it/1o93m3u
@r_linux
why is no one talking about ATL?
https://preview.redd.it/6bb5uouwaqvf1.png?width=1889&format=png&auto=webp&s=00072dd25564433f2b0e2e3b3b637e86daa9755c
I just found out about ATL (Android Translation Layer) and I’m honestly surprised it’s not getting more attention.
It’s a lightweight layer that lets you run Android apps on Linux without a full Android container like Waydroid. It works kind of like Wine for Android, translating calls instead of virtualizing a whole system.
The project’s still new, and the list of working apps is short for now, but it’s already available in Alpine edge (and postmarketOS edge too).
Feels like this could be huge if it matures, yet barely anyone mentions it.
Why is no one talking about this?I just found out about ATL (Android Translation Layer) and I’m honestly surprised it’s not getting more attention.
It’s a lightweight layer that lets you run Android apps on Linux without a full Android container like Waydroid. It works kind of like Wine for Android, translating calls instead of virtualizing a whole system.
The project’s still new, and the list of working apps is short for now, but it’s already available in Alpine edge (and postmarketOS edge too).
Feels like this could be huge if it matures, yet barely anyone mentions it. Why is no one talking about this?
https://redd.it/1o9bsjj
@r_linux
https://preview.redd.it/6bb5uouwaqvf1.png?width=1889&format=png&auto=webp&s=00072dd25564433f2b0e2e3b3b637e86daa9755c
I just found out about ATL (Android Translation Layer) and I’m honestly surprised it’s not getting more attention.
It’s a lightweight layer that lets you run Android apps on Linux without a full Android container like Waydroid. It works kind of like Wine for Android, translating calls instead of virtualizing a whole system.
The project’s still new, and the list of working apps is short for now, but it’s already available in Alpine edge (and postmarketOS edge too).
Feels like this could be huge if it matures, yet barely anyone mentions it.
Why is no one talking about this?I just found out about ATL (Android Translation Layer) and I’m honestly surprised it’s not getting more attention.
It’s a lightweight layer that lets you run Android apps on Linux without a full Android container like Waydroid. It works kind of like Wine for Android, translating calls instead of virtualizing a whole system.
The project’s still new, and the list of working apps is short for now, but it’s already available in Alpine edge (and postmarketOS edge too).
Feels like this could be huge if it matures, yet barely anyone mentions it. Why is no one talking about this?
https://redd.it/1o9bsjj
@r_linux
ONLYOFFICE Docs 9.1 Introduces Powerful PDF Redaction, New Annotations
https://linuxiac.com/onlyoffice-docs-9-1-introduces-powerful-pdf-redaction/
https://redd.it/1o9itbe
@r_linux
https://linuxiac.com/onlyoffice-docs-9-1-introduces-powerful-pdf-redaction/
https://redd.it/1o9itbe
@r_linux
Linuxiac
ONLYOFFICE Docs 9.1 Introduces Powerful PDF Redaction, New Annotations
ONLYOFFICE Docs 9.1 delivers 4× faster spreadsheet formulas and advanced tools for PDF redaction and editing.
This Week in Plasma: Plasma 6.5 is nigh and KDE is 29 years old; help us celebrate!
https://blogs.kde.org/2025/10/18/this-week-in-plasma-plasma-6.5-is-nigh-and-kde-is-29-years-old-help-us-celebrate/
https://redd.it/1o9k9xw
@r_linux
https://blogs.kde.org/2025/10/18/this-week-in-plasma-plasma-6.5-is-nigh-and-kde-is-29-years-old-help-us-celebrate/
https://redd.it/1o9k9xw
@r_linux
KDE Blogs
This Week in Plasma: Plasma 6.5 is nigh and KDE is 29 years old; help us celebrate!
Welcome to a new issue of This Week in Plasma!
This week we put the finishing touches on Plasma 6.5, and I think it’s gonna be a pretty darn good release when it comes out in 3 days! So eyes started turning towards features and UI improvements again, and…
This week we put the finishing touches on Plasma 6.5, and I think it’s gonna be a pretty darn good release when it comes out in 3 days! So eyes started turning towards features and UI improvements again, and…
How GNU can you make GNU/Linux?
I came up with the most GNU system you can have with your linux.
First you need the kernel (the Linux part of GNU/Linux). Did you guys know that the FSF maintains a fully libre Linux kernel (linux-libre)? That's right, not only can you have GNU/Linux, you can have GNU Linux!
Onto the init system, GNU has an init of its own, GNU Shepherd. The only distro that uses it is Guix, which cleanly brings us to the package manager. GNUs package manager is Guix, but for those who hate declarative package management theres also GSRC (though, this is more akin to the FreeBSD ports system)
You also have the standard things that make a GNU/Linux a GNU/Linux, like the coreutils, glibc, bash, the GNU toolchain, and whatever other application software you want
The system is pretty boring so far, so why not spice it up a bit? For multiple windows in the TTY there's GNU screen. For an actual graphical environment, we have 4 to choose from: EXWM, Ratpoison, GNUstep, and MATE.
EXWM is a window manager that works inside of emacs, allowing you to manipulate X windows like you would emacs buffers.
While ratpoison isn't a GNU project, it's hosted on Savannah (GNUs VCS forge) and aims to replicate GNU Screen so I'd say it counts.
NeXT we have GNUstep (pun very much intended). GNUstep is a gui toolkit that aims to work like NeXTs gui toolkit. It also has a graphical file manager/desktop (gworkspace) and window manager (window maker). Unfortunately, there is a severe lack of application software
Finally, we have MATE, put on this list because it forked from GNOME when it was still a GNU project and most of GNUs GUI software use GTK. If this doesn't sway you, it's the desktop stallman himself uses (when he isn't in a TTY)
But wait, there's still more! You can replace MATEs window manager with EXWM, completing our GNU system. Add in GNUs web browser (icecat) and you're set to do anything you need to do on a computer (as long as it doesn't require nonfree javanoscript or proof of work)
Of course, you could just use emacs for everything and call it a day
https://redd.it/1o9mzsj
@r_linux
I came up with the most GNU system you can have with your linux.
First you need the kernel (the Linux part of GNU/Linux). Did you guys know that the FSF maintains a fully libre Linux kernel (linux-libre)? That's right, not only can you have GNU/Linux, you can have GNU Linux!
Onto the init system, GNU has an init of its own, GNU Shepherd. The only distro that uses it is Guix, which cleanly brings us to the package manager. GNUs package manager is Guix, but for those who hate declarative package management theres also GSRC (though, this is more akin to the FreeBSD ports system)
You also have the standard things that make a GNU/Linux a GNU/Linux, like the coreutils, glibc, bash, the GNU toolchain, and whatever other application software you want
The system is pretty boring so far, so why not spice it up a bit? For multiple windows in the TTY there's GNU screen. For an actual graphical environment, we have 4 to choose from: EXWM, Ratpoison, GNUstep, and MATE.
EXWM is a window manager that works inside of emacs, allowing you to manipulate X windows like you would emacs buffers.
While ratpoison isn't a GNU project, it's hosted on Savannah (GNUs VCS forge) and aims to replicate GNU Screen so I'd say it counts.
NeXT we have GNUstep (pun very much intended). GNUstep is a gui toolkit that aims to work like NeXTs gui toolkit. It also has a graphical file manager/desktop (gworkspace) and window manager (window maker). Unfortunately, there is a severe lack of application software
Finally, we have MATE, put on this list because it forked from GNOME when it was still a GNU project and most of GNUs GUI software use GTK. If this doesn't sway you, it's the desktop stallman himself uses (when he isn't in a TTY)
But wait, there's still more! You can replace MATEs window manager with EXWM, completing our GNU system. Add in GNUs web browser (icecat) and you're set to do anything you need to do on a computer (as long as it doesn't require nonfree javanoscript or proof of work)
Of course, you could just use emacs for everything and call it a day
https://redd.it/1o9mzsj
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the linux community
Updated Linux Patch Would Disable RDSEED For All AMD Zen 5 CPUs
https://www.phoronix.com/news/RDSEED-Disable-All-Zen-5
https://redd.it/1oa59qw
@r_linux
https://www.phoronix.com/news/RDSEED-Disable-All-Zen-5
https://redd.it/1oa59qw
@r_linux
Phoronix
Updated Linux Patch Would Disable RDSEED For All AMD Zen 5 CPUs
A few days back we reported on a Meta engineer uncovering an architectural issue with RDSEED usage on AMD EPYC 9005 'Turin' CPUs
🚨 HUGE: Spotify Lossless/HiFi is LIVE on the Linux Desktop Client (PipeWire Proof Inside!)
Hello r/linux,
I have some exciting news for all Linux audiophiles! It seems **Spotify has quietly enabled Lossless (HiFi) audio streaming on their native Linux client** without any official announcement or client update.
I confirmed this via the audio pipeline, and the results clearly show a CD-quality stream.
# 1. Discovery and Client Details
* **Spotify Version:** 1.2.63.394.g126b0d89 (Copyright (c) 2025, Spotify Ltd)
* **Operating System:** Linux Mint 22.2
* **Audio Server:** PipeWire (Running via pipewire-pulse)
* **Prerequisite:** Spotify Premium subnoscription (The Lossless option appeared under the quality settings.)
I noticed a new **'Lossless'** option in the Audio Quality settings, situated right below 'Very High.' When this setting is activated and playing a track, the audio output is immediately upgraded.
# 2. Technical Verification (The Proof)
To verify that the client is actually streaming at a higher quality than the standard 320 kbps Ogg Vorbis/AAC, I checked the output format reported by PipeWire using the `pactl list sink-inputs` command.
The crucial finding is that the audio stream is running at **44.1kHz**.
# 🔑 Key Output Lines (From pactl list sink-inputs)
サンプル仕様: float32le 2ch 44100Hz
形式: pcm, format.sample_format = "\"float32le\"" format.rate = "44100" format.channels = "2" ...
プロパティ:
application.name = "spotify"
application.process.binary = "spotify"
media.name = "Spotify"
node.rate = "1/44100"
media.class = "Stream/Output/Audio"
What This Means:
44.1kHz (CD Quality): This confirms the stream is using the CD-standard sampling rate, a hallmark of lossless quality, and is not the standard 48kHz used for most compressed streams and general PipeWire mixing. Float32LE: Spotify is utilizing a high-resolution, 32-bit floating-point format internally, which is a best practice for maintaining audio integrity and avoiding digital clipping before the DAC. Server-Side Switch: Since there was no client update, this feature appears to have been rolled out via a server-side feature flag (a "secret switch") to select users/clients.
# 3. Call to Action
If you are a Premium user on the Linux desktop client, please check your audio quality settings now! Can anyone else confirm this behavior, especially on different distributions or with ALSA/JACK? This is a massive win for the Linux desktop audio ecosystem!
*(元の投稿者による日本語コメント: これまでLinuxでロスレス再生は非常に複雑でしたが、PipeWireのおかげでスムーズに実現できています。この発見は本当に嬉しいです!)*
https://redd.it/1oa64rp
@r_linux
Hello r/linux,
I have some exciting news for all Linux audiophiles! It seems **Spotify has quietly enabled Lossless (HiFi) audio streaming on their native Linux client** without any official announcement or client update.
I confirmed this via the audio pipeline, and the results clearly show a CD-quality stream.
# 1. Discovery and Client Details
* **Spotify Version:** 1.2.63.394.g126b0d89 (Copyright (c) 2025, Spotify Ltd)
* **Operating System:** Linux Mint 22.2
* **Audio Server:** PipeWire (Running via pipewire-pulse)
* **Prerequisite:** Spotify Premium subnoscription (The Lossless option appeared under the quality settings.)
I noticed a new **'Lossless'** option in the Audio Quality settings, situated right below 'Very High.' When this setting is activated and playing a track, the audio output is immediately upgraded.
# 2. Technical Verification (The Proof)
To verify that the client is actually streaming at a higher quality than the standard 320 kbps Ogg Vorbis/AAC, I checked the output format reported by PipeWire using the `pactl list sink-inputs` command.
The crucial finding is that the audio stream is running at **44.1kHz**.
# 🔑 Key Output Lines (From pactl list sink-inputs)
サンプル仕様: float32le 2ch 44100Hz
形式: pcm, format.sample_format = "\"float32le\"" format.rate = "44100" format.channels = "2" ...
プロパティ:
application.name = "spotify"
application.process.binary = "spotify"
media.name = "Spotify"
node.rate = "1/44100"
media.class = "Stream/Output/Audio"
What This Means:
44.1kHz (CD Quality): This confirms the stream is using the CD-standard sampling rate, a hallmark of lossless quality, and is not the standard 48kHz used for most compressed streams and general PipeWire mixing. Float32LE: Spotify is utilizing a high-resolution, 32-bit floating-point format internally, which is a best practice for maintaining audio integrity and avoiding digital clipping before the DAC. Server-Side Switch: Since there was no client update, this feature appears to have been rolled out via a server-side feature flag (a "secret switch") to select users/clients.
# 3. Call to Action
If you are a Premium user on the Linux desktop client, please check your audio quality settings now! Can anyone else confirm this behavior, especially on different distributions or with ALSA/JACK? This is a massive win for the Linux desktop audio ecosystem!
*(元の投稿者による日本語コメント: これまでLinuxでロスレス再生は非常に複雑でしたが、PipeWireのおかげでスムーズに実現できています。この発見は本当に嬉しいです!)*
https://redd.it/1oa64rp
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the linux community
I'm Out Of The Loop. What's the deal with DHH (Omarchy) and Framework vs Gnome, Debian and other projects?
I'm curious to know why there is so much drama among these Linux folks, at least on social media and communication channels.
* I didn't know anything about Hyprland, but it seems that its main developer is quite problematic and authoritarian, calling users on Discord or GitHub idiots at the slightest provocation, or for not having the same knowledge as him.
* I've heard something about Omarchy, a distro created by DHH based on Arch + Hyprland. I know he's a controversial character, very much cut from the cloth of the typical wealthy tech bro.
* Finally, I've heard of Framework, a company that manufactures Linux laptops.
It seems, if I'm not mistaken, that Framework decided to donate to and support Hyprland and Omarchy, among other projects, and there have been communities such as Gnome and Debian that haven't had a good opinion of this? With some in Gnome thinking of rejecting the donation and Debian removing Hyprland from its repositories?
Meanwhile, what I've seen on social media is DHH attacking these projects as much as he can and integrating himself into circles that link Linux with ideology, from a conservative or right-wing/far-right point of view, starting to criticize these projects for being leftist, and saying they criticize him “for calling attention to the hypocrisy of the left, which generates defensive overreactions,” and “I was blissfully unaware of just how nutty things had gotten in much of Linux land, and didn't realize GNOME had been fully captured.”
**Captured by who? What is all this shit? What's the context suddenly for all this? Was Framework already a huge donor or this is just overreacted and no problem?**
I'm perplexed by how so little part of the community can make such a big fuss and be able to turn on the shit fan over so many people over so many projects (Gnome, Debian...)
https://redd.it/1oa74wh
@r_linux
I'm curious to know why there is so much drama among these Linux folks, at least on social media and communication channels.
* I didn't know anything about Hyprland, but it seems that its main developer is quite problematic and authoritarian, calling users on Discord or GitHub idiots at the slightest provocation, or for not having the same knowledge as him.
* I've heard something about Omarchy, a distro created by DHH based on Arch + Hyprland. I know he's a controversial character, very much cut from the cloth of the typical wealthy tech bro.
* Finally, I've heard of Framework, a company that manufactures Linux laptops.
It seems, if I'm not mistaken, that Framework decided to donate to and support Hyprland and Omarchy, among other projects, and there have been communities such as Gnome and Debian that haven't had a good opinion of this? With some in Gnome thinking of rejecting the donation and Debian removing Hyprland from its repositories?
Meanwhile, what I've seen on social media is DHH attacking these projects as much as he can and integrating himself into circles that link Linux with ideology, from a conservative or right-wing/far-right point of view, starting to criticize these projects for being leftist, and saying they criticize him “for calling attention to the hypocrisy of the left, which generates defensive overreactions,” and “I was blissfully unaware of just how nutty things had gotten in much of Linux land, and didn't realize GNOME had been fully captured.”
**Captured by who? What is all this shit? What's the context suddenly for all this? Was Framework already a huge donor or this is just overreacted and no problem?**
I'm perplexed by how so little part of the community can make such a big fuss and be able to turn on the shit fan over so many people over so many projects (Gnome, Debian...)
https://redd.it/1oa74wh
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the linux community