today's leftovers
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GNU/Linux
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Desktop/Laptop
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Android Police ☛ How much would you spend on building an anti-MacBook?
I recently took an aging Intel Chromebook and converted it into an AMD Linux machine that can game on the go. It's a Framework 13, and every part is replaceable,a nd many are upgradeable, to the point you can build out a Windows or Linux system that runs on Intel or AMD. Not only can you easily swap the M.2 storage, you can also load up on RAM with two slots, unlike MacBooks that are glued together. The Framework, to me, is the exact opposite of a MacBook, a machine I built that runs an OS I customized and am in full control of, and honestly, I'm having a blast using it. Of course, this all came at a high cost, not only for the new parts, but the original machine.
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Kernel Space
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The Register UK ☛ Rust drivers expected to become more common in Linux kernel [Ed: The "non-technical nonsense" is what Microsoft does. GAFAM, knowing that Torvalds does not comprehend Rust, may have found one way to marginalise him and other senior kernel hackers.]
Since at least September last year, when Microsoft software engineer Wedson Almeida Filho left the Rust for Linux project citing "non-technical nonsense," it's been clear that acceptance had limits. Tensions between Rust and C kernel contributors flared again in January over concerns about the challenges of maintaining a mixed language codebase – likened to cancer by one maintainer. Urged to intervene, Linux creator Linux Torvalds did so, making his annoyance known to both parties and prompting their departures as Linux maintainers.
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Desktop Environments (DE)/Window Managers (WM)
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K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt
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Nate Graham ☛ Personal and professional updates — announcing Techpaladin Software
After six years at Blue Systems GmbH, I’ve had the privilege of working daily with some of the finest and most ethical engineers I’ve ever known; lots of people whose names you probably recognize, because they’re some of the biggest contributors to Plasma and KWin, and regularly appear in This Week in Plasma.
Starting earlier this month, about a dozen of Blue Systems’ current people — myself included — have moved over to a new company named Techpaladin Software that’s co-owned by me and someone else you probably know: David Edmundson!
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