youtube.com

toothbrush, to linux in Created a Java Application for Easy '.desktop' File Creation
@toothbrush@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Don’t most desktop environments already have this?

If you want to include this as an option when right clicking the desktop, you will probably need to patch this into the DE of your choice, however I think at least KDE has an option for custom right click actions.

ScottE,

Yep, all desktop environments have this - whatever text editor is handy. :⁠-⁠)

MrOzwaldMan, (edited )

I see, I didn’t know KDE had that, does KDE allow java apps to be used as the right click action? As for GNOME, I’m still trying to figure it out.

Until then, I will post the link to the app in the future. It needs some beautification, and quality of life changes so you and the others can use it as you use sudo apt update and upgrade to update your PCs.

toothbrush,
@toothbrush@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Yes, it works with any command.

leopold, (edited )

For KDE right click menus, you need to use service menus: develop.kde.org/docs/apps/dolphin/service-menus/

These are used by Plasma and most KDE apps that deal with files.

Krusader has a more powerful system for this called UserActions, but they’re exclusive to Krusader and afaik Krusader is also compatible with service menus, so these are much less portable: docs.kde.org/trunk5/en/…/useractions.html

yianiris,
@yianiris@kafeneio.social avatar

A window manager is enough with any customizable drop menu, can open a file manager of choice, create a folder or file, no desktop is needed.

worker ~/.Desktop

or whatever filemanager one is using

@toothbrush @MrOzwaldMan

QuazarOmega,

Don’t most desktop environments already have this?

An environment agnostic tool isn’t a bad thing though, it already exists as PinApp, though I’m guessing OP is doing this more as a learning project

MrOzwaldMan,

Damn, i didn’t know this existed. Welp, at least I know how to manipulate the system from code.

QuazarOmega,

Don’t be discouraged, doing something from scratch is always a great learning opportunity and even if this isn’t the first iteration of such a tool there is room improvement, for instance, I don’t think any of the tools that allow creation .desktop shortcuts interface with any context menu as yours would do in the future, so that could be a cool feature to show off!

DigitalGemini, to star_wars in The Bad Batch | The Final Season Official Trailer | Disney+

As a Star Wars fan since the 1980s, please sell me on why I should spend time watching this show. I have heard good things but haven’t got around to watching it yet. What makes this show among the best of Star Wars? If it is.

setsneedtofeed,
@setsneedtofeed@lemmy.world avatar

I’m not particularly a fan of the art style, but this show has the best iteration of it both in the graphics and designs.

The action is good and it feels like a very distilled iteration of many of the good things about The Clone Wars but to me it is fresher to follow along with the Bad Batch as opposed to Anakin and Obi-Wan.

DigitalGemini,

Thanks for the detailed reply!

ShadowCat,
@ShadowCat@lemmy.world avatar

It’s certainly not the best, but if you enjoyed the clone wars and the characters of the clones, it’s worth watching to see their story continued into the era of the Empire

Kabutor,

this is the correct answer, you liked Clone Wars/Rebels, this is more of that on a more serious tone. You haven’'t watched CW/R? Probably you dont care about this

DigitalGemini,

Thanks!

FordBeeblebrox,

It shows the transition from Republic troops to Empire troops in real time as Palestine seizes control, and the animation is incredible. Probably the best looking animated Star Wars show so far.

Gamoc,

This anti Palestine propaganda is getting a bit far fetched.

setsneedtofeed,
@setsneedtofeed@lemmy.world avatar

I choked up laughing. Please don’t edit this.

FordBeeblebrox,

Autocorrect strikes again, I’m leaving it

Alivrah, to linux in Can this be replicated with opensource software?[p2p file transfer over thunderbolt, and extremely low latency Video and game streaming (no encoding)]

Ew Linus, ugh

ShadowCat, to star_wars in CLONE WARS: BATTLE OF THE HEROES - A Star Wars Fan Animation by HELLO THERE Production
@ShadowCat@lemmy.world avatar

It definitely wasn’t clone wars season 7 quality but you can’t expect that from a fan project however for a fan project it was fantastic quality.

Was really cool to see the full fight and not cutting back and forth between this and Yoda v Palpatine.

Baaron87,

Agreed on both points. The animation may not have been season 7 quality, but for a fan project it definitely did a fantastic job.

I enjoyed watching the full fight uninterrupted with jump cuts between Yoda and Palpatine removed. I did like seeing some of the minor additions to the fight and thought using voice lines from the lego Star Wars games was a great choice (didn’t feel out of place).

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

The only issue I had was with the lightsaber choeography. It was well done for a fan project but there were some parts that didnt feel right in the execution.

ChocolateTeapot, to lotrmemes in The Naked Ring starring Leslie Nielson

And my (naked) gun…

miss_brainfart, to privacy in Governments spying on Apple, Google users through push notifications: US senator | World DNA
@miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml avatar

I don’t think I can really fault any Android developer for wanting to use Firebase and be done with it, because it’s just so simple to implement, and generally easy to work with.

But some things should be more important than comfort, shouldn’t they.

skullgiver, (edited )
@skullgiver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl avatar

deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • miss_brainfart, (edited )
    @miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml avatar

    I mean, it was kinda expected and inevitable that one big service was going to reign supreme. Lots of things make push notification a real hassle, like you describe. Speaking for Android as I don’t know much about iOS, Firebase works incredibly well, it’s a super elegant solution, and if Google wasn’t such a shitshow, I’d love it.

    But it is a shitshow, in so many ways. So some services encrypt the contents, some don’t send them over those servers in the first place, but the remaining metadata is still shockingly useful for surveillance purposes.

    I don’t really know where I’m going with this comment, but as an EU resident, I’d just like to see alternative systems getting more attention.

    Idk, it’s just that so many people hear news like this and go: „It is what it is, can’t change it“

    Well not with that attitude, that’s for sure

    lemmyvore, to linux in [Video] Red Hat Is About To End Xorg: Is Wayland Ready?

    There’s no Red Hat anymore, it was sold to IBM 5 years ago. All their recent shifts in FOSS strategy are a predictable result of that. IBM only cares to streamline RHEL operations not about what’s usable or appropriate for Linux in general.

    bbbhltz, to linux in What do you think about this?
    @bbbhltz@beehaw.org avatar

    https://beehaw.org/pictrs/image/d5b2e59d-8e47-45be-b2c7-8d633f5ca6c2.webp

    Don’t like that he called some distros pointless. I would have found a better word. Lots on there that I have never used, obviously, because I am not a sadist. I couldn’t tell you what would be good for gaming or not, but flatpaks have made some things easier (or so I’ve heard, don’t quote me on that). And Fedora is a “Devil?”

    Anyway. While I don’t watch this channel ever, I am aware of it as a reputable channel for things like this, so it might be trustworthy.

    Why are Debian and Arch at the top? Debian is one of the grandaddies. Many distros are built on Debian—MX, Mint, Ubunu, Pop, Zorin, Neon, etc.—and there are many packages in the repos, which are divided into stable, and testing, and unstable sections. So, a Debian base can be stable or extremely up to date. The Debian community and maintainers are another reason the distro is so well-liked. Arch also has a large selection of packages, an excellent wiki, and the AUR to have access to anything missing from regular repos. Manjaro and dozens of others are based on Arch as well, meaning the community is rather large.

    No need to follow rules and conventions though. There are many people, myself included, that use Alpine for their desktop because the packages are very up to date.

    Papercrane, (edited )

    Interesting that you said Arch has a good wiki. Maybe its just because its not common for beginners to start with Arch but when i read through the installation guide i noticed that there is no explanation on how to create a bootable usb in windows, at least the part for how to verify the signature wasnt explained for a windows user. For Linux Mint it was pretty much at the top, how to create a bootable usb in windows. I was very suprised that this guy called fedora and ubuntu the “devil” when i saw many people here use fedora.

    One question though, you talked about packages and how they are sometimes different. How much had the amount of options for packages an effect on you, or anyone, while choosing your distro?

    bbbhltz,
    @bbbhltz@beehaw.org avatar

    How much had the amount of options for packages an effect on you, or anyone, while choosing your distro?

    The number of packages was not something I looked at. I checked the availability of the packages I wanted, and whether or not they we’re up to date.

    When I switched to the current distribution I’m using, I did not plan on using it for more than a few days. I just wanted a quick and easy way to try out an up-to-date version of a DE on a low-powered device and have the newest version of the browser I use. It worked so I put it on my main laptop and it still works

    If I were going for numbers, Nix has the most I think. The AUR is up there as well. Debian is in 3rd place. But, like I said, I didn’t really think about that.

    kelvie, to linux in 10 REASONS why Linux Mint is the desktop OS to beat in 2023

    I’ve used Linux for over two decades (red hat to Gentoo to Ubuntu to arch) and I must say it’ll be a tough sell to get me back to an RPM or a debian based distro solely due to how god awfully slow the package managers (dpkg and rpm) are.

    Since Docker came along and brought with it the ride of Alpine and APK, it made me realize that system upgrades on a modern processor, fast internet, and an SSD should take seconds, not minutes.

    Immersive_Matthew, to linux in 10 REASONS why Linux Mint is the desktop OS to beat in 2023

    I sure wish I could get off Windows and onto Linux, but as a VR developer, it really is not feasible. Sucks

    Molten_Moron,

    At least you get Windows and not the abomination that is MacOS.

    cries in iOS developer

    dino,

    I’d rather use macOS than windows anyday.

    Subverb,

    I run a small business, but I’m also I’m an embedded systems developer on ARM processors for my products. Our toolchain is Windows-specific. That and the Adobe suite which I also need for my business keep my primary work machine Windows.

    My laptop is Linux but even that creates occasional hassles with my work flow and presentations.

    morrowind,
    @morrowind@lemmy.ml avatar

    What are you developing for? Hololens?

    Immersive_Matthew,

    Meta Quest and SteamVR.

    I_like_cats,

    Me here playing VR games on Linux: wut?

    Immersive_Matthew,

    My VR runs fine on Linux, just I cannot develop it on Linux as the tools are simply not available.

    imgel, to linux in 10 REASONS why Linux Mint is the desktop OS to beat in 2023

    Lmao

    CADmonkey, to mildlyinteresting in Nanobot Carry Lazy Sperm to Fertilize Living Eggs

    Are they trying to make someone even lazier than me?

    CorrodedCranium, (edited ) to star_wars in Star Wars: Dark Forces review by Civvie11
    @CorrodedCranium@leminal.space avatar

    Shout out to the open source engine recreation Force Engine. It’s a neat way of playing this game on modern computers.

    djsoren19, to star_wars in A Disturbance in the Force - Official Trailer (2023) Seth Green, Weird Al Yankovic

    Gilbert Gottfried! Is this the last film he’ll be seen in?

    rufus, (edited ) to opensource in Can this be replicated with opensource software?[p2p file transfer over thunderbolt, and extremely low latency Video and game streaming (no encoding)]

    I found this article from 2018: …kellner.me/…/thunderbolt-networking-on-linux/

    And this from 2022: chrisbergeron.com/…/ultra-fast-thunderbolt-nas-wi…

    Seems you just plug in the cable on Linux and you’re done. Low latency video can be transferred over network for example with gstreamer/pipewire and files with any file transfer protocol.

    Artemis_Mystique, (edited )

    RDP with low latency over thunderbolt? from the video it looks its new software intel has developed for windows, so its most likely proprietary. I was mostly thinking along the lines of using the technology to simulate S.L.I where half the frames are drawn by one pc and the other half by another

    Also in the Article the data transfer speeds are in Mbps whereas in the video it is touted in Gbps

    rufus, (edited )

    With GStreamer you can build a pipeline you like, you don’t need to use RDP, you can send uncompressed frames plain over network like in the video. I’m not an expert on graphics processing. SLI or NVLink are (I think) proprietary parallel processing interconnects. But NVidia didn’t invent parallel processing. I’m sure there are other solutions available. Though, I somehow doubt those will help you because they’re generally tailored to other (HPC/datacenter/simulation) purposes and not for gaming. And I think they use something like Infiniband for that and not thunderbolt.

    With the speed, mind the first article is 5 years old. And I’m not sure how the hardware in the second one compares to what Linus uses or if it’s even the same generation of Thunderbolt. It’s probably gotten way faster since. I can’t try because only 1 device I own supports thunderbolt at all.

    I think transferring files over thunderbolt networking or low latency video is nothing new. It can be easily replicated. And setting up 2 gstreamer pipelines is just two (lengthy) commands. Replicating NVlink is another thing, though. We probably need an expert on graphics drivers to tell if that already exists or how difficult that would be to implement. Most people will probably just fit 2 graphics cards into one computer or buy one faster GPU because that is both cheaper and way faster than connecting them in 2 separate computers with added latency.

    (MPI would be an example of an open standard to do parallel computing with arbitrary interconnects.)

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • localhost
  • All magazines
  • Loading…
    Loading the web debug toolbar…
    Attempt #