Hírolvasó
Jóval kevesebb pénzt hoznak már konyhára az Xbox konzolok
Natív backup megoldással bővül a Microsoft 365
[$] LWN.net Weekly Edition for August 1, 2024
A deprecation timeline for older Arm CPUs
Vanilla OS 2 "Orchid" released
Version 2.0 of the Vanilla OS image-based Linux distribution has been released. Dubbed "Orchid", Vanilla OS is now based on Debian Sid (prior versions were Ubuntu-based), allows creation of customized Linux environments, support for running Android applications using Waydroid, and many other improvements.
[$] Showing up for Python in GNOME
A few years ago, PyGObject—the Python package that provides bindings for GTK and GNOME applications—was not faring particularly well. Several maintainers had left the project and its development was not keeping pace with changes in GTK. At this year's GUADEC, Dan Yeaw presented a talk about the project's decline, improvements in the last year, and his experience getting involved in an undermaintained project.
Forgejo v8.0 released
Version 8.0 of the Forgejo software-development platform has been released. Notable changes include the removal of non-free software found in the codebase, improved stability, and a reduction in "seemingly random User Interface changes":
A gentle way of describing Forgejo User eXperience is that it is an acquired taste: it grew over the years, driven by the inspiration of the person with the keyboard in their hand. Once implemented it almost never changed. A user who started with Forgejo in 2022 can only see minor changes in 2024 and not all of them make intuitive sense. The solution to this problem is simple and was identified early on: User Research. But only in the making of Forgejo v8.0 did it get some momentum.See the release notes for a full list of changes.
[$] Pulling Linux up by its bootstraps
A bootstrappable build is one that builds existing software from scratch — for example, building GCC without relying on an existing copy of GCC. In 2023, the Guix project announced that the project had reduced the size of the binary bootstrap seed needed to build its operating system to just 357-bytes — not counting the Linux kernel required to run the build process. Now, the live-bootstrap project has gone a step further and removed the need for an existing kernel at all.
Security updates for Wednesday
Elérhetővé vált az OpenAI fejlett hangasszisztense
Újabb helyen érhető el a MÁV-Volán új utazástervezője, EMMA
A Direct One műholdas ügyfeleit is megkaparintotta a 4iG
TypeScript támogatást kap a Node.js
Elkezdik felhúzni a TSMC első európai gyárát
[$] Famfs: a filesystem interface to shareable memory
Pete Zaitcev: Fedora Panic Canceled
The other day I was watching a video by Rich Jones about Fedora on RISC-V. In it, he mentions off-hand that CentOS Stream 10 inherits from Fedora 40.
I don't know how that happened anymore, but previously someone made me think that 1. there will be no more numbered releases of CentOS, which is why it is called "CentOS Stream" now, and 2. CentOS Stream is now the upstream of RHEL, replacing Fedora. I really was concerned for the future of Fedora, that was superfluous in that arrangement, you know!
But apparently, Fedora is still the trunk upstream, and CenOS Stream is only named like that. Nothing changes except CentOS is no longer a clone of RHEL, but instead RHEL is a clone of CentOS. What was all the panic for?
I made a VM at Kamatera a few months ago, and they didn't even have Fedora among images. I ended using Rocky.
Funtoo Linux is being discontinued
Daniel Robbins, founder of the Gentoo Linux distribution and its spinoff Funtoo Linux, has announced that he has decided to end the Funtoo project:
Funtoo started as a philosophy to create a fun community of contributors building something great together. For me, it's no longer that so I need to move on to other things. There is not a successor BDFL for Funtoo nor am I interested in trying to find one, or hand the project off to someone else. You can expect the project to wind down through August. If you have a Funtoo container, it will continue to be online through the end of August so you have time to find another hosting solution if you need one.[$] Report from the annual general meeting at GUADEC
At GUADEC in Denver, Colorado on July 21, the GNOME Foundation held its annual general meeting (AGM) to provide updates from the foundation's board and committees. Topics included work accomplished in the past year, challenges facing the GNOME Foundation–including fundraising and finding a new executive director–and some insight into plans for the next year. And last, but not least, the awarding of the Pants of Thanks.