I haven’t noticed any major issues with Webkit on my Mac, only that Safari’s UI sucks.
Unfortunately Gnome Web also inherits most of Safari’s bad UI design. Really the only thing I want from Gnome Web (apart from performance improvements) is to have a bookmarks bars like Chromium and Firefox. Having to go into the bookmarks side bar is a major slowdown. I’ve had to work around it by using a keyboard shortcut for a new tab, typing in the bookmark name, then using arrow keys to navigate to it.
What are its benefits? It basically just feels like Safari, unfortunately including the things about Safari I don’t like.
Main thing I noticed is that it has the built in tracker (and I think ad?) blocking. I use AdGuard on Safari, but sometimes it doesn’t work correctly because AdGuard stopped running in the background.
Huh, he mains NixOS. Always a bit funny to see someone daily driving a distro different than what they professionally work on.
I thought I recognized that blog, I remember reading his blog TPM+FDE for NixOS back when I was trying NixOS.
There’s a theory that they’re the same person. I’m not sure how reputable it is, I follow them both, but haven’t seen any videos of them.
It certainly is a bit funny how Asahi Lina chose not to take a leadership position and she hasn’t steamed dev work in a month…
Clickbait. The VP Engineering for Ubuntu made a post that he was looking into using the Rust utils for Ubuntu and has been daily driving them and encouraged others to try
It’s by no means certain this will be done.
I know you can with Raspberry Pi’s and Ampere CPUs.
Not sure about X Elite, that hardware still isn’t fully upstreamed. Ubuntu has decent support for them though.
There are plenty of Windows on ARM laptiops available from major manufacturers, including Microsoft, Samsung, Acer, Asus, Dell, etc. Microsoft notably sells their ARM laptops for less than the Intel version; not sure about the other brands.
The iGPUs obviously don’t compare to dedicated GPUs, even those that are a few generations old, but it has enough power for gaming in lighter games and even heavier games if you’re willing to turn the graphics to low and lower the resolution.
Last I saw, there were a lot of game incompatibility issues, but I haven’t been paying attention since launch. But this thread is literally about Epic improving their support on ARM, albeit with a “they hate Linux!” spin on it.
It means they expect Windows on ARM to get bigger.
I just went on a journey looking at different local music players.
Just tried Rhythmbox. It’s not terrible, but not great either. It looks very bare bones.
Of the ones I’ve tried, I like Elisa the best. I spent a ton of time getting HQ artwork and quality metadata on my files and Elisa really shows that off. Rhythmbox barely shows any artwork. I just have two complaints about Elisa. First, Qt apps just don’t feel right in Gnome for various reasons: fonts are often too thick, icon contrast is bad, and Qt theme is weird for non-Breze. It also has weird scrolling behavior: it has forced scrolling smoothing and acceleration.
Runner up is Sayonara. It’s Qt based, but actually feels decent in Gnome. Overall I like the UI more than Elisa, but unfortunately it doesn’t handle showing my library as well. Artwork is duplicated (it shows albums multiple times if songs in them have different years) and some artwork is inexplicably missing.
Canonical is making the security patches.
Also, you don’t have to release your source code changes to the public. You only have to release your changes to those who have access to the product.
That being said, Canonical probably does release the source code changes for their security fixes, I just don’t know where.
Yes. Ubuntu has two main repos, main and universe.
main is relatively small and includes everything that comes with Ubuntu by default. Canonical secures this repo with security fixes for everyone.
universe is not officially supported by Canonical. It’s updates are done by community members. However, Ubuntu started a service called Ubuntu Pro / ESM that provides updates for packages in universe. It’s opt in because Canonical wants companies using Ubuntu to pay for Pro in order to help fund Ubuntu. However, Pro is also free for personal use on up to 5 machines, so there’s no reason not to enable it. f it was enabled by default then no one would pay for it.
Haven’t heard about any distros removing Firefox from the repos.
It’s possible that some distros may go an IceWeasel by default route, but I see that as unlikely.
Problem is that it wouldn’t launch for them. Fedora has an RPM for it, but I don’t think Ubuntu does.
Try “flatpak override —user —reset” and “flatpak override —system —reset”.
GTK3->GTK4 should be easier than GTK2->GTK3.
The frog color management protocol is based on the upstream protocol. They used an experimental version to bring the feature to Steam Deck faster.
Though Frog did do a good job with pushing FIFO forward.
Are you sure about that? KDE has a feature that lets Xwayland apps snoop if certain keys are pressed, but Gnome does not.
Apps need to add support for the new portal system. Chromium is adding (or added?) support, so Discord may implement it once they use an Electron version with support.
If you’re using KDE, you can tell Discord to use X11 and use KDE’s feature to let X11 apps snoop on key presses.
Already merged there some time ago.
Safari has PWAs. They call it “Add to Dock”. Works well in my experience.