today's leftovers
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208: Linux 5.19, Linux Mint 21, DreamWorks, Fedora Linux, SCALE 19x and more Linux news! - This Week in Linux - TuxDigital
On this episode of This Week in Linux: Linux 5.19, Linux Mint 21, My Trip to SCALE 19x in Los Angeles, Slax 11.4 & 15.0, QPrompt 1.1, Fedora to Disallow CC0-Licensed Code, DreamWorks Open-Sourcing MoonRay Renderer, Ubuntu 22.04.1 LTS Delayed, Q4OS 4.10, 4MLinux 40 and much more on Your Weekly Source for Linux GNews!
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Is Wayland Tailored Only For GNOME's Needs? - Invidious
There's this interesting theory I saw pop up the other saying that the Wayland XDG shell was tailored entirely for GNOME's needs, lets go through he arguments and see if it makes any sense.
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Do I need Kubernetes?
Image generated by DALL-E 2 -- A hexagon comprised of pink, blue, green, yellow, orange and purple colored trangles combining into octarine in space, digital art, 8k uhd, anime style...
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Paul Wise: FLOSS Activities July 2022
This month I didn't have any particular focus. I just worked on issues in my info bubble.
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USB driver package version 12.13 now available
Arca Noae is pleased to announce the immediate availability of release 12.13 of our USB stack.
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Proton Experimental gets Halo Infinite working plus Airborne Kingdom
Hot on the heels of Proton 7.0-4 getting a Release Candidate, Valve has put up a new build of Proton Experimental and it's quite an exciting one. This is the special version of Proton you can try, that often pulls in new features and fixes earlier to get more Windows games working on Linux desktop and Steam Deck.
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Five Years of Fosstodon Questions - Kev Quirk
Brandon, incidentally one of the oldest members on Fosstodon, asked a few questions in response to my post on Five Years of Fosstodon. So I thought I’d answer them here.
The answers to these questions will take up way more than the 500 characters allowed by Mastodon, and as regular readers will know, I really dislike threads. So it made sense for me to post the answers here.
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Open-Source and Quadratic Funding
Open-source developers are rarely compensated relative to the impact that their code has. So how should we fund code that might be considered a public good?