I’ve wanted this for a while; when I’m done with my computer, I don’t mind it staying on a bit longer to do this, rather than when I next turn it on when I (presumably) want to do something. Great add!
I’ve wanted this for a while; when I’m done with my computer, I don’t mind it staying on a bit longer to do this, rather than when I next turn it on when I (presumably) want to do something. Great add!
I get so aggressively spammed with this shit that I have deleted legitimate invited talks at real conferences
“Oh, the little deaf girl can communicate now! Say something!”
"The majority of mankind is ground down by industrial oppression in order that the small remnant may live in ease.”
“No, not like that”
In defense of this warning, when I first put my application on Flathub, I had it because of how file i/o worked (didn’t support XDG portals, so needed home folder access to save properly). It did actually motivate me to get things working with portals to not request the extra permissions and get the green “safe” marker.
A lot of apps will always be “unsafe” because they do things that requires hardware access, though, so I could see them wanting something more nuanced.
I can hardly wait for this plus the v555 Nvidia driver to come to Fedora
I have ADHD and like gardening, but nope, wouldn’t want to deal with keeping a bonsai tree. However, a bonsai tree is just a tree that’s kept small from how it’s maintained. If you plant it outside, it will just be a tree, eventually (unless it dies, idk if you’re in an ok climate for it).
There’s an “Enable HDR” checkbox in the “Displays & Monitor” part of System Settings. Of my two monitors, it only shows up in the configuration of the one that supports HDR (makes sense).
In my case I had another WM installed (iceWM, I think it was there by default?) and did the upgrade from there. Unfortunately it does seem that if you try to upgrade from within KDE it will crash part-way (I used zypper dup and it failed).
On my PC at home I’m running KDE Plasma on OpenSUSE Tumbleweed with two monitors: 1440p 240 Hz, 4k 60 Hz. Both are connected via displayport to an RTX2080. It works perfectly fine for me.
A while back, I used Linux Mint on the same system and it was a headache, where it would sometimes boot to a blank screen and I would have to restart a random number of times before it would work. I never did figure out the underlying cause, it just went away when I changed distros for other reasons…
I also hate how every time I accidentally open Edge it shits a search bar onto my desktop
does it taste like raspberries, or does it taste like oh my god why can’t I stop vomiting?
When does this take place? I just looked at my hosts file and the lines
::1 twitter.com
::1 www.twitter.com
are still there??
I’ve had it since 2016, so it’s close to 7 years now. I replaced the screen and battery on it, but it has been pretty solid. Actually, uptime is something that’s an advantage for self-repairable stuff: when the screen needed to be replaced, it still worked enough to use, which I did until the replacement arrived. Takes a minute to swap the screen and then it’s running again.
I’m based in Germany so I only used it in the US when traveling. Maybe the 5 will be the one where they decide to cover the US officially? It seems like there’s more attention to repairability than there was 7 years ago…
I hope it comes out soon - I’m still using my Fairphone 2 but it’s really time for it to retire
Did I understand it right that you installed the driver manually? It’s generally better to use the Fedora Nvidia driver package (sudo dnf install akmod-nvidia), than to download from Nvidia’s website. I’m on Fedora 40 too, and currently using the 560.35.03 version of the driver on a 2080, which upgraded from 555 recently - I wonder if that’s what broke compatibility with your version of the driver. It may be that you need to update. Only thing I’m not sure of is how this will interact with manually-installed drivers…