TheGrandNagus

@TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world

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GNOME Sees Progress On Variable Refresh Rate Setting, Adding Battery Charge Control (www.phoronix.com)

As pointed out in This Week in GNOME, there’s been some continued work on Variable Rate Refresh for the GNOME desktop. The VRR setting within GNOME Settings continues to be iterated on as the developers iron out how they’d like to present the Variable Rate Refresh setting for users. The developers have been discussing how to...

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

Great. I heard there was a cursor flickering issue under some niche scenarios, due to the cursor and the content’s framerates becoming out of sync with one another after exiting some full screen apps, that was previously preventing the merge of this feature.

I’m assuming it’s been solved?

The “Preserve battery healthy by keeping charge between 20% and 80%” is a nice option too

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

I definitely get what you mean, and sometimes agree, but tbh I’m glad Gnome is an option for those who want a DE that is uncompromisingly UX-focused and straight up won’t accept changes until they’re damn sure it’ll be production-ready.

And while they’ve been relatively slow in getting adaptive refresh working, they’ve been very quick with some other things. Idk why it took them this long to sort out the cursor occasionally becoming out of sync with displayed content’s refresh rate, but there must be a reason for it.

Gnome was at the forefront with Wayland, PulseAudio, they’ve been the biggest pusher of Portals, pretty much all of their GTK4 apps have been designed to also be compatible with mobile devices. Accessibility features on Gnome are also pretty great for a Linux DE.

As a general rule, I’d say their development process works well, despite there being the occasional holdup.

And while Plasma obviously isn’t nearly as bug-free as Gnome, it’s come a long way since the Plasma 4/early Plasma 5 days. I still don’t feel I can depend on it the same as I could for Gnome or Cinnamon (compositor crashes bringing down all open apps is a big issue in particular - and is finally due to be fixed in Plasma 6), but don’t underestimate their progress — since like 5.15/5.16 they’ve improved leaps and bounds.

And with 6 it looks like they’ve learned from the mistakes of 4 and 5’s launches.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

Nobody says that. Literally nobody. It’s just a strawman you made up.

Racism exists literally everywhere where humans live.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

No.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

1000068107

Americans formulating newer and more insane measurements because they can’t use normal ones

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

'ate dependency hell

'ate outdated packages in distro repos

'ate snaps

luv flathub

simple as

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

The Brexit clusterfuck was prior to the Trump clusterfuck, and certainly prior to Texit.

Shit, chief neoliberal shithead Reagan is just Thatcher with a USA badge slapped on the front.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

I mean, for the subset of people who go to uni and can support themselves without also working a lot in that time, yeah.

In my time at uni there was

  • work, at which the hours were inconsistent
  • coursework, which there was a lot of
  • constantly battling a shit landlord who didn’t give a toss about uni students and left the flat in disrepair, but the housing shortage meant he could get away with charging a fortune for a mouldy flat with broken windows and non-working appliances

There was a lot of good, sure, but uni can be a very stressful time.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

Your school day was 8 to 6? Damn. That definitely doesn’t sound normal.

TheGrandNagus,

And then you get out of school and realise that those were the good times.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

Plasma 6 seems to be fixing a lot of the issues I currently have with Plasma - bugs, inconsistency, general jank. Looking forward to its release so I can give it another go

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

Love that they’re making these accessibility improvements as an open platform that other DEs can also leverage. Linux and Linux programs are going to become a lot more accessible to people because of this foundational work.

Compliments to the gnome devs and to the STF, accessibility is something very important that understandably doesn’t usually receive much development.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

Not even slightly true lol

It works very well on desktops, and is forced upon nobody.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

It’s not forced on you. Nobody makes you use it.

“It’s default on some distros!!”

And? Who’s making you use them? Use one of the other distros that doesn’t use Gnome, or install a different DE after installation.

“It’s like Microsoft forcing Edge!!”

No it isn’t. For almost all PCs, Windows is installed by default with no other option.

If you’re using Gnome, it’s because you went out of your way to install it, or you went out of your way to purchase a Linux laptop and chose one with Gnome, which is far from the only option even in that space.

And you can disagree that it works on desktops all you like. All the people who use it on desktop would disagree with your opinion.

Just because something doesn’t work like Windows does, doesn’t mean it’s not for desktops.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

Gnome has been pretty great on Wayland for a while.

Personally I’ve been using it since 2017, and besides a stint with a 1080 Ti that was constantly causing issues, it’s been pretty good besides screen sharing in some programs. Speaking of…

I just wish Discord would fix their shitty app or people would abandon that shitty app. Unfortunately neither looks likely.

TheGrandNagus,

People misunderstand this rule.

It’s not about popping batteries out, but instead about making them more easily replaceable (so no gluing them in place kinda thing)

But even then it only applies if the battery degrades by more than a certain amount over the course of 2 years. If it doesn’t, or if it’s over a certain capacity, they don’t need to do anything different.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

Genocide requires intent. Whereas this alien just had a fleeting moment of anger at the time of his wife being murdered.

Can he really be tried for genocide? It’s hard to say, but I’d say not. We all have dark intrusive thoughts, and in this instance it had disastrous consequences.

It’s all moot anyway. If you have no means or intention to enforce a law, does it really exist?

TheGrandNagus,

TL;DR: they’re pretty much exactly the same

TheGrandNagus,

Desktop: don’t care, keyboard is standardised

Laptop: less-used keys can be different sized or in different positions. I want that shit backlit so I can find where they’ve shifted those keys to

TheGrandNagus,

3 pips and gold uniform? TIL Picard was in engineering or security before he made captain

TheGrandNagus,

Quark: returns the shopping trolley, but only to get the coin deposit back

TheGrandNagus,

Can’t believe all those eugenics wars happened in the 90s and the press didn’t report on it

WAKE UP SHEEPLE

TheGrandNagus,

Imagine not being part of the SCART masterrace

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

Been on Wayland since 2016 and to this day my only issues (apart from when I had an Nvidia card for a few months, that is…) was video sharing in Discord/steam in-home streaming, both of which still don’t work right.

Other than that, it’s been great. Multi-monitor works way better, far fewer bugs, my desktop feels a lot more fluid and smooth.

On laptops, Wayland+Gnome gestures are exceptional, putting even Apple’s gestures to shame. I cannot stress enough how good of a job Gnome+Wayland does with trackpad gestures. It makes other gesture systems, especially ones under X11, feel like they were cobbled together by a Fallout 3 modder.

Overall Wayland has been great for me. I just wish Discord would fix their shitty app.

TheGrandNagus,

I was surprised to find out recently that in the US, they dubbed over the British English in bob the builder with American English.

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