[-] qwesx@kbin.social 41 points 9 months ago

A crash in the window manager takes down all running applications: Yes, because the compositor IS the server, window manager AND compositor at the same time.

Maybe not anymore in the future: https://blog.davidedmundson.co.uk/blog/qt6_wayland_robustness/

Wayland is biased towards Linux and breaks BSD

FreeBSD already has working Wayland compositors by the way.

[-] qwesx@kbin.social 37 points 9 months ago

I don't know about the creators of this project, but in general: So that they can use the stuff in their closed source applications while finding enough contributors to write software for them for free.

[-] qwesx@kbin.social 38 points 9 months ago

So that people can't easily track how much time is spent on getting round window corners compared to how much time is spent not implementing thumbnails in a file chooser dialog?

18 years, by the way.

[-] qwesx@kbin.social 62 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Ich hätte lieber, wenn in geschlossenen Ortschaften generell 30 gefahren werden müsste, aber die Argumentation von Anwalt Klinger ist ja absolut haarsträubend.

Falls seine Klienten die Schilder abmontieren müssten, "würde sich das bundesweit auswirken, beispielsweise auch auf freiwillige Geschwindigkeitsmesser mit einem Smiley, wie man sie in vielen Dörfern sieht".

Brudi, das Problem ist, dass das originale Schild farb- und designtechnisch aussieht wie ein reguläres Verkehrszeichen (Es ist verboten, Zeichen aufzustellen, die amtlichen Schildern gleichen, "mit ihnen verwechselt werden oder deren Wirkung beeinträchtigen können".). Ein Geschwindigkeitsmesser mit einem Smiley sieht nicht aus wie ein reguläres Verkehrszeichen.

Abgesehen davon:

Aber stehen nicht überall in der Republik Tafeln oder Pappschilder, auf denen Anwohner bitten, langsamer zu fahren? "Den Kindern zuliebe"?

Ja, die stehen an vielen Stellen, haben aber üblicherweise keine rot umrandete Geschwindigkeitsbegrenzung aufgedruckt.

[-] qwesx@kbin.social 26 points 11 months ago

Grüße gehen raus an meinen bevorzugten Kugelschreiberlieferanten: www.penisland.net (Sicher für die Arbeit - aßer dein Chef hat keinen Humor)

[-] qwesx@kbin.social 39 points 11 months ago

That means every time a new Kernel version is installed, the Nvidia driver DKMS has to be installed too. And that is basically the slowest part.

ZFS users: "First time?"

[-] qwesx@kbin.social 30 points 11 months ago

Ich möchte ergänzen:

  1. Ausnahmen für den Mindestlohn abschaffen.
[-] qwesx@kbin.social 31 points 11 months ago

Du kennst die Regeln.

[-] qwesx@kbin.social 34 points 1 year ago

Serviervorschlag

[-] qwesx@kbin.social 27 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You're supposed to use hplip for HP printers. There's a Debian package for it in the main repositories.
edit: You can look up the printers and supported features with hplip here. Looks like your printer is perfectly supported (as long as you let hplip's tray program install their proprietary driver plugin).

[-] qwesx@kbin.social 26 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Keine Sorge, die Seite der Stadt Bremerhaven findest du natürlich unter caschys-blog.de.

[-] qwesx@kbin.social 60 points 1 year ago

Red Hat's source code for RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux) was previously publicly accessible, even if you were not a customer. Now only customers may get access to the source code (which is allowed by the GPL since source code only has to be delivered to those who have received binaries generated from it). But there are Linux distributions who use Red Hat's publicly available sources to create RHEL "clones" (in quotation marks because they obviously don't pretend to be RHEL), except without providing the corporate support one would receive for being a RHEL customer. They do have community forums though.

The superficial issue is that those "clone"-distros would have to either purchase a RHEL license or apply to one of Red Hat's other programs to access the sources for their own distro. The actual issue is that Red Hat's terms for being a customer are that they'll kick you out if you use that code to redistribute your own versions of it (or, god forbid, even create a full distro from it).

Since CentOS proper was killed off years ago, many people who wanted a Red Hat compatible server distro but didn't want or need commercial support shifted their systems to the aforementioned other "clone"-distros, which are now in danger of disappearing because of that change.

Is Red Hat legally able to do it? Yes. Is it a dick move? Absolutely. Will it help spread the popularity of RHEL or other Red Hat distros? Absolutely not.

view more: next ›

qwesx

joined 1 year ago