9to5linux.com

joeldebruijn, to linux in Debian Bookworm and Bullseye Users Receive Important Linux Security Updates

I had a security download (but not yet installed) ready yesterday. Logged off without installing. Turned on my device today and couldnt log in. Checked my pwd 3 times before seeing "authentication service not working " iirc.

After reboot it installed and logging in worked.

Is this related or not and is it expected? Not being able to log in without a mandatory patch first so to say?

DaPorkchop_,

no that just sounds like a bug

nik282000, to linux in Debian Bookworm and Bullseye Users Receive Important Linux Security Updates
@nik282000@lemmy.ca avatar

Good thing my server still runs Jessie!

Fizz, to linux in Debian Bookworm and Bullseye Users Receive Important Linux Security Updates
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

As a headline reader I’d sure hope users of these distros receive security updates

IrritableOcelot, to linux in Scribus 1.6 Open-Source Desktop Publishing App Released as a Major Update

This seems interesting and it seems like a big update. Has anyone used this for print media formatting? Can you speak to how well it works, how easy it is to use, and what it’s like to switch if you’re coming from Publisher or InDesign?

spacecow,

I mostly use it to make my resume. It works well for that, but feel like it would be annoying to make a large document using it.

cygnus, (edited )
@cygnus@lemmy.ca avatar

I tried it years ago and it felt more like Quark to me (not a compliment) but should give it another chance. For the past several years I’ve been using Affinity Publisher in a Windows VM.

Edit: just tried it out a bit (ver. 1.5.8 because that’s what’s in the Arch repo) and it’s better than I remembered. Adobe-like shortcuts. I made a new document and created a few text styles.

clb92,

I’ve previously used versions 1.4.* and 1.5.* quite a bit for print, because I’m a one-man marketing department in a tiny company.

Scribus was (is?) somewhat finicky and cumbersome to work with. It had certain quirks and workarounds you had to learn to deal with. It lacked many creative features you find in bigger suites. I didn’t feel like I worked quickly and efficiently in it. BUT I got my work done in it nevertheless, and I really appreciate that it exists for the people that simply can’t afford the alternatives.

Nowadays I use the Affinity suite, which includes Affinity Publisher, a competitor to InDesign. It’s quite affordable and not subscription-based.

jlow,

Used Adobe for years, made an effort in the last year to switch to FOSS, mainly Inkscape and Scribus. And yes, as other comments have mentioned these tools have some weird quirks and some things don’t work. But that’s the same for Adobe and most other software. I remember switching from Macromedia Freehand (lol, remember that) to Illustrator back in the day and everything felt just wrong and awful in tge beginning (until you learned to work around the quirks?). It’s super hard to tell how much it’s “Software Bad” vs “Not Used to New Thing” and this will be different for everybody as well. But nobody (including the software) is stopping you from using this professionally, I just finished a 20 page PDF for a client with Scribus, used it to print my 32 page comic etc.

library_napper, to linux in Firefox 122 Enters Public Beta Testing with Improved Built-In Translation Feature
@library_napper@monyet.cc avatar

Is it local or cloud-based?

cupcakezealot,
@cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

it’s local (see the addon that it was based on: addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/…/firefox-translations/)

shreddy_scientist,
@shreddy_scientist@lemmy.ml avatar

Local, that’s what’s so rad about it!

moon, to linux in Firefox 122 Enters Public Beta Testing with Improved Built-In Translation Feature

I’m hoping their translation software ends up supporting Chinese/Japanese. Also come to Android please! Hopefully on Android in and out of reader mode.

shreddy_scientist,
@shreddy_scientist@lemmy.ml avatar

I would dig this, I’d bet it’s in the works. Biggest question is when it’ll be released.

EccTM, to linux in Firefox 122 Enters Public Beta Testing with Improved Built-In Translation Feature

I wish they’d remove the US-only geo-restriction they have on half the autofill functionality.

Alto,
@Alto@kbin.social avatar

Isn't that due to stricter data collection/retention regulations in the EU?

Vincent,

I think it's just because some things have country-specific formats. For example, if you want to prefill credit card details, you have to figure out how the credit card fields are labelled.

possiblylinux127, (edited ) to linux in Firefox 122 Enters Public Beta Testing with Improved Built-In Translation Feature

The feature is a privacy nightmare. I wish it was done locally.

Edit: it is

moon,

It is done locally

kugmo,
@kugmo@sh.itjust.works avatar

Bio checks out.

tsonfeir,
@tsonfeir@lemm.ee avatar

At least they are self aware.

mik,

Firefox Translations is an add-on that helps translate websites in Firefox without using the cloud. Additionally, Firefox version 118 introduces a built-in translation feature, allowing you to perform translations locally within your browser, prioritizing your privacy and security. This feature enables you to effortlessly surf the web in your preferred language. For in-depth guidance on utilizing this feature, explore our Firefox built-in fullpage translation guide.

Source

I think it is translated locally.

possiblylinux127,

Oh that is pretty cool

Axisential, to linux in Darktable 4.6 Open-Source RAW Image Editor Released, Here's What's New

I really, really want to like Darktable, mostly because of the name lol. I must’ve tried it 8 or 10 times over the years, but I just can’t get my head around it. Something about the design language or the UI or something just doesn’t click for me and I can’t get decent images out of it. So I keep going back to Rawtherapee, even though I’d rather not…

Sina,

Personally i’m okay with the UI, but the default rendering is often so bad that I have to “fix” every single image. To me it’s either Raw therapee or just reboot into Windows …

manos_de_papel,

You should make a style to apply that brings you (close) to what you want. Out of the box, dakrtable shows you a minimally processed image. Its your job to take it from there.

Sina,

It shows me a very wrongly processed image. It was better when I used Fuji, but even then it was never anywhere close to what an unprocessed bland raw file should like.

manos_de_papel,

This is too vague to provide any further guidance. Again, darktable shows you a minimally processed raw image by default. You can get a good looking rendering by adding a few more modules in a style and applying that style by default.

manos_de_papel,

Have you read the basic editing section in the manual?

You can share a raw image at discuss.pixls.us and people will edit it and post the sidecar so you can see their edits.

RawTherapee is also good tho.

Axisential,

Yes, and I understand the process pretty well I think, as well as what I’m striving to output (long time Lightroom user). But the DT just doesn’t respond how I expect it to, with unexpected results. Frustrating.

Wasn’t aware of the pixls site though; I like that idea!

manos_de_papel,

If you expected to apply your lightroom workflow, then you will be frustrated, yes.

onlinepersona, to linux in Plymouth Linux Graphical Boot Manager Now Better Handles Display Rendering

My experience with the linux boot has never been flicker-free. It’s bugged me for years, but I don’t have the technical knowledge to fix it. There’s a black screen between BIOS and plymouth, then a black screen between plymouth and the login screen, then another black screen between the login screen and the splash screen, and finally a black screen between the splash screen and when the desktop shows up.

Mac and windows do a much better job at having a seamless experience from boot to desktop.

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

stepanzak,

What’s the


<span style="color:#323232;">?ref=chooser-v1
</span>

in the url? Works fine without it.

onlinepersona,

Comes from chooser-beta.creativecommons.org

Which browser isn’t it working on?

stepanzak,

It works fine for me, it’s just unnecessary argument AFAIK.

MonkderZweite,
rotopenguin,
@rotopenguin@infosec.pub avatar

And the price for that beautiful, flicker-free experience is … some Macs will brick themselves. You can get them into a state where (IIRC) the dual-boot between an older macOS and a newer one (or Ashai) disagree on display modes, and the bootloader dies. Only Apple can fix that.

onlinepersona,

That’s macs. Fuck em. With linux I can always put in a USB stick with a live linux and fix shit.

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

TimeSquirrel, (edited )
@TimeSquirrel@kbin.social avatar

I usually just disable all this useless eyecandy shit. I like seeing the raw boot messages scroll across my screen. Let's me know early if something is fucked.

ReakDuck, (edited )

I wish Windows (11) would have this. Literally having a broken Windows Partition right now after starting Rick an Morty VR adventure game…

I only use Windows for VR gaming

dingdongitsabear, (edited )

I’m also trying to get the flicker-free boot. switching to systemd-boot improved the jerkyness, but the blank before the decrypt password remains.

I’ve enabled suspend-then-hibernate and whereas earlier I’ve had to endure this jerkyness rarely, now I have to witness it multiple times a day when resuming from disk. at least it’s faster than cold boot.

LoveSausage, to linux in Fedora Asahi Remix Officially Released for Apple Silicon Macs

Most are talking about the laptops. I have my eyes on a Mac mini to run asahi on. The biggest downsides with Mac hardware is reperability and upgrades. Some issues the Mac mini doesn’t have Vs laptops is ofc is no battery replacement , screen and keyboard webcam, mouse to use. and there are hubs for installing more storage. Ram is ofc a big minus. Looking at m2 16 GB 512 mb. And extend storage with something like this macworld.com/…/mac-mini-upgrade-hub-storage-ether… 40 Gbs thunderbolt would make it easy to extend storage at least.

As long as it doesn’t break I would take this over any alternative minipc . I use my ThinkPad today but 99% of use is at home anyway so no need for portability. Need to wait some time to get the extra funds for it but something like that…

d3Xt3r,

As long as it doesn’t break I would take this over any alternative minipc

May I ask why though? One of the biggest advantages of using a MacBook is the performance-battery efficiency. If you’re going to get a Mac mini and loading Linux, you lose that advantage.

Unless you’re looking specifically for an ARM64 machine for whatever reason, I think an AMD mini PC, say something like the Minisforum EliteMini UM780 XTX would be technically a better option - you get dual NVMe, dual 2.5G network ports, USB 4.0, Oculink for even more b/w than Thunderbolt, and far more I/O options in general. Not to mention, excellent Linux support.

LoveSausage,

I will have to look into it , but all reviews/comparisons I have seen has been always that the Mac beats the others. I do not game , I want audio and some video editing besides code.

Power consumption is a point as well as I am planning on going off the powergrid eventually.

mfat, to linux in Fedora Asahi Remix Officially Released for Apple Silicon Macs

I mean this is what a proper distro loooks like. Tailoring another distro for a true, specific purpose. Kudos to the team.

vanderbilt,
@vanderbilt@beehaw.org avatar

Yes, it’s not just a DE and default package set but actual system improvements other distros aren’t offering. Kudos to the Asahi team for making this possible!

heliumlake, to linux in Fedora Asahi Remix Officially Released for Apple Silicon Macs
@heliumlake@lemmy.world avatar

Been daily driving Asahi (first ALARM then Fedora when they transitioned) and it’s been exciting to experience in real time how far the project has come. When I first installed, audio didn’t work, the graphics driver was incomplete, and battery life left a lot to be desired. Skip to today and it’s evident how committed marcan and other contributors are to not just porting, but making everything feel right. Highly suggest following him or Lina on Mastodon.

mfat,

How is battery life compared to Mac os?

velitedi,

Bad, but marcan has mentioned elsewhere that there’s a lot of room for improvement in this space, both active and idle

krash,

This is awesome. What hardware are you running (m1 or m2)? Also, is there anything that isn’t working?

I’ve been eyeing to buy a m* silicon based mac, but I’m not into tinkering into fixing things.

heliumlake,
@heliumlake@lemmy.world avatar

Sorry a bit let to reply, but I’m running on M1 Air and Mini. Off the top of my head, built-in microphone doesn’t work and external displays don’t work through USB/Thunderbolt. Was also having trouble getting my audio interface to work even in class compliant mode. Otherwise it’s a very polished and easy experience.

Yerbouti, to linux in Fedora Asahi Remix Officially Released for Apple Silicon Macs

This is great!! I use macOS for work but I’m sure I can get 90% of the work done on Linux now! Just wondering about GPU perfomance? Video editing is crazy fast on macOS, anyone tried on Asahi?

franklin, (edited )
@franklin@lemmy.world avatar

I know that they only recently got opengl support and it was pretty primitive so I would imagine they have some work to do on the GPU side

Blisterexe,

They have full vulkan now too, but it’s not quite mature enough to be enabled by default rn (afaik)

PrefersAwkward,
@PrefersAwkward@lemmy.world avatar

If they can get full vulkan, maybe Zink can take care of the rest

NamelessGO, to linux in Fedora Asahi Remix Officially Released for Apple Silicon Macs

Great news

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