The makers of GrapheneOS have confirmed they are partnering with a major Android OEM to bring the OS to Snapdragon-powered flagships.

I've never heard about sailfishos before. Are there any phones running it now? Also, forgive my lack of knowledge, but what's stopping people from running it on their samsungs or whatever?
The whole thing does look interesting. Hopefully it picks up so that in 2 or 3 years when i'll be shopping for a replacement to my pixel 8 I'll actually have some good options.
Its not that bad to start with arch it's not as hard as it used to be. I started with endeavourOS approximately a year ago and most things just work out of the box and you don't need to do much and honestly i find it easier than having to navigate layers of abstractions.
Most of my time went into configuring stuff like hyprland, nvim and other stuff and arch just worked.
I came with 0 linux knowledge, the only terminal commands i knew were cd and ls and if not for arch I don't think I would have been hooked on linux. That being said, I get it and sometimes it is frustrating but just putting it out there that it's doable.
Yeah I noticed the main AUR package was last updated in June 2024. Thought they abandoned it but the GitHub shows the last release was around the same time. Downloaded sioyek-git instead and it works great.
I think I'm sticking with Sioyek. It checks enough boxes for what I need from a pdf viewer. Well documented, no performance issues, and it supports epub too.
The command line tools, portals, ruler for reading, keyboard text selection, searchable highlights, easy file opening, marking. Really vim-like. Need to customize some keybinds but otherwise don't see a reason to look elsewhere for now.
Just tried it, setting gfx.webrender.compositor.force-enabled to true made firefox unusable with all sorts of visual glitches so I changed back both.
Kinda annoying. Somewhere a month ago firefox suddenly turned sluggish. It loads fine, video playback is ok as well, but the UI animations on the video player like seeking, changing volume, subtitles or video speed are really laggy.
I switched to a completely new profile and tried disabling all of my extensions but it's the same. Kinda accepted it at this point and am ignoring it. It came out of the blue hopefully it gets fixed as well.
Oh Sioyek looks interesting. Also the blog is great !
I personally want something more minimal.
Why use a terminal pdf viewer?
I've been using Firefox to view PDFs and it works fine. Recently though I wanted to try something more minimal with vim keybindings. Found two options: Zathura and tdf (terminal pdf viewer).
What I'm curious about is why someone would choose a TUI pdf viewer over a regular one (like Zathura). What are the actual advantages people find in practice. tdf mentions being fast but I wonder if that's something you'd actually notice day to day?
Also I remember seeing screenshots where PDFs looked transparent or matched the terminal colors. Is that actually a feature of some of these viewers ? Maybe someone uses one here?
Tdf seems relatively popular with 1.4k github stars.
What are the main things Wezterm does better than Kitty, in your opinion? Back when I looked at trying a different terminal I was just not convinced there's that much of a difference between say Kitty and the other hyped ones.
That being said, back then I didn't need any of this session stuff and multiplexing as I used ZelliJ.
Yep, he showed around Calibre in the interview and most of it's features. The calibre-server thingy is cool, you can host it on your home server and access your library from any device through a web interface.
(Full Interview) Creator of Kitty Terminal and Calibre | Kovid Goyal
Click to view this content.
I came across this interview that I found interesting of a guy (Kovid) who both made Calibre and Kitty.
It made me appreciate his contribution to the terminal ecosystem and actually made me switch off of a multiplexer (ZelliJ) to kitty sessions, which have been developed since the release of this interview. I'm happy with them, they solve my problem and are far more intuitive and simple than ZelliJ with no performance inefficiencies and key-bind conflicts.
Some of the more interesting parts that he talked about in this interview:
Oh interesting I wasn't aware of how all of these things work. So even on the strictest CSS font visibility setting system fonts are not hidden (provided Document Fonts is enabled)? Local fonts I assume are hidden?
I remember thinking how strange it is that websites can know all of your installed fonts when I was playing around with https://coveryourtracks.eff.org/ and https://www.amiunique.org/
I'm on linux and I have some extra fonts installed. Just the combination of them alone is so unique to me that you don't need anything else.
It has a lot of momentum, so it will continue to dominate. But I wonder if it will decline over the long term as Linux continues to improve. Similar to how smartphones barely differentiate themselves from one another these days (compared to the past) maybe operating systems will have a similar fate. Maybe I’m a bit naive, but perhaps Linux will eventually have all the stability and ease of use of Windows, while also offering privacy, customization, and open-source benefits so there will be no real reason to use windows and the split will be more even.
Maybe... eventually...
I didn't like it either on first play-through but I will try it again soon !
On a related note, try Vimium (FF / chrome extension) that brings vim motions into your browser. You will have a more complete experience.
For those that want a quick summary, they're doing these things:
I found it fascinating how much Meta is spending on AI, 72 B a year, more than the GDP of Alaska!
Also feel like it was a good summary of Zucks and Meta's whole past failures.
You also have to control a bit portion of the shares of the company or voting rights, which he does, so share holders can't boot you out.
That's cool. Never heard of PostmarketOS before.
I have a set amount of "donation money" for FOSS every month. Most of these donations are not recurring, if i find a valuable FOSS project that actually helps me I give back some % of that amount, sometimes if there's a lot of them I flip between them. That being said I have donated now 3 months in a row to Hyprland since I use it and I think it's great.
Why Zuck is so good at making terrible products
Click to view this content.
All of my notes are stored in markdown files (Obsidian), don't use any other apps. Syncthing to sync between phone and PC.
Oh fascinating you can just do it manually.
How stupidly easy file recovery is on Linux
Today had some important markdown file that accidentally deleted on my SSD and had to go over the recovery of it.
All I did was this:
run sudo systemctl status fstrim.timer to check how often TRIM runs on my system (apparently it runs weekly and the next scheduled run was in 3 days)
run sudo pacman -S testdisk
run sudo photorec
choose the correct partition where the files were deleted
choose filesystem type (ext4)
choose a destination folder where to save recovered files
start recovery
10-15 minutes and it's done.
open nvim in parent folder and grep for content in the file that I remember adding today
That's it - the whole process was so fast. No googling through 10 different sites with their shitty flashy UIs promising "free recovery," wondering whether this is even trustworthy to install on your machine, dealing with installers that'll sneak in annoying software if you click too fast, only to have them ask for payment later. No navigating complex GUIs eithe
The makers of GrapheneOS have confirmed they are partnering with a major Android OEM to bring the OS to Snapdragon-powered flagships.

What happens when you remove a highway to restore a stream that had been buried underneath

The Cheonggyecheon stream restoration project in Korea. Got the screenshot from this walk: Seoul Night Walk From Dongguk University to City Hall | Walking Tour 4K HDR - YouTube
Context about it : They Tore Down a Highway and Made it a River (and traffic got better) - YouTube
Not gonna lie Korea has some nice vibes to it.
As Escape from Tarkov comes to Steam, it highlights Battlestate Games’ connections to Russia’s military sector and its silence on the war in Ukraine.
