Mugurel Tudor

17 Followers
77 Following
230 Posts
Berlin-based devops engineer, working in the antivirus industry for a lifetime. Music lover and amateur photographer. Professional complainer.
Websitehttps://mtudor.xyz

We are pleased to announce the release of GNOME 50! You can read about what our contributors have been working on at https://release.gnome.org/50

We’d like to use this new release as an opportunity to thank all of the contributors who made it happen. ❤️

Let us know what you think!

#GNOME #OpenSource #FLOSS #FOSS #Linux

GNOME Release Notes

Discover what's new in GNOME, the distraction-free computing platform.

GNOME Release Notes
I put the ability in liability.

Blue-light filters are pure quackery

I was trading New Year’s resolutions with a circle of friends a few weeks ago, and someone mentioned a big one: sleeping better. I’m a visual neuroscientist by training, so whenever the topic pops up it inevitably leads to talking about the dreaded blue light from monitors, blue light filters, and whether they do anything. My short answer is no, blue light filt

https://www.osnews.com/story/144463/blue-light-filters-are-pure-quackery/

#InTheNews

Blue-light filters are pure quackery – OSnews

A few of the stunning illustrations from a 16th-century treatise on comets — known as The Comet Book — created anonymously in Flanders (now northern France).

More info and images from the book here: https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/the-comet-book

AI eliminated the natural barrier to entry that let OSS projects trust by default. People told me to do something rather than just complain. So I did. Introducing Vouch: explicit trust management for open source. Trusted people vouch for others. https://github.com/mitchellh/vouch

The idea is simple: Unvouched users can't contribute to your projects. Very bad users can be explicitly "denounced", effectively blocked. Users are vouched or denounced by contributors via GitHub issue or discussion comments or via the CLI.

Integration into GitHub is as simple as adopting the published GitHub actions. Done. Additionally, the system itself is generic to forges and not tied to GitHub in any way.

Who and how someone is vouched or denounced is up to the project. I'm not the value police for the world. Decide for yourself what works for your project and your community.

All of the data is stored in a single flat text file in your own repository that can be easily parsed by standard POSIX tools or mainstream languages with zero dependencies.

My hope is that eventually projects can form a web of trust so that projects with shared values can share their vouch lists with each other (automatically) so vouching or denouncing a person in one project has ripple effects through to other projects.

The idea is based on the already successful system used by @badlogicgames in Pi. Thank you Mario.

Ghostty will be integrating this imminently.

GitHub - mitchellh/vouch: A community trust management system based on explicit vouches to participate.

A community trust management system based on explicit vouches to participate. - mitchellh/vouch

GitHub
Say what you like about the NSA, at least they listen to you.
This is beautiful. I've been looking at this for 5 hours now.
Windows erasing your Linux bootloader

@spipau i never liked KDE. I checked it recently and I dislike it as much as I disliked it before. Too busy.

I don't think it's about the "Windows way", because I used linux a lot in the past and not all the interfaces I used were like that. I was pretty happy for a long time with Window Maker. Or Fluxbox. I will stay with Gnome for now for "nostalgia efect" because I used it for many years in the past, before it was even version 1.0 and up until 2.something. I'll see how it goes.

@spipau Having it open all the time in a virtual screen seem both annoying and unnecessary. Or maybe I'm missing how to do this "the gnome way".

At the moment I added Dash to Dock extension and enabled minimize via Tweaks. It's somehow OK like this. But I'd still love to see a working tray area (tried to add an extension but didn't seem to work with Signal but somehow worked with Spotify, and some others were not compatible because of Wayland).