

There’s gotta be a modern version of Fortunate son brewing somewhere with a cybertruck whizzing sound as the intro.


There’s gotta be a modern version of Fortunate son brewing somewhere with a cybertruck whizzing sound as the intro.
Was an i3 user, testing sway here and there but couldn’t make the full switch. For some reason I couldn’t find some replacement e.g. feh (minimalist image viewing and bg setting, something that works with RAW images), ranger’s backend for image preview, devour (terminal swallowing).
Until last year when a teams chat leaked during an online course I am a TA. It wasn’t too bad of a leak but still decided to find a replacement as I knew niri had something implemented. Switched to niri after that, the block-out-from is very useful. Found swayimg as a replacement for feh, managed to get ranger preview working with sixel (foot), found a work around for window swallowing (basically use niri msg action to consume-window-into-column then set the height to 0% and back). A lot of functionality of my ‘DE’ is based on rofi-scripts, which just works so didn’t have to tweak much for functionality. Absolutely love the window switcher that was introduced last year. I did have a window switcher with rofi, which I still use but the fancy one is cool too.
On Wayland, it’s really a compositor rather than an X11-style window manager.
On Wayland it’s both the window manager and compositor (compositing window manager).
In X11, you have to bring your own compositor or not use one. River is trying to separate it like in x11 but it’s a compositor only. You have to bring a separate wm. And from what I understand, in Wayland it won’t work without a compositor (but I could be wrong on that one).
I myself identify as an equalist . I hate all of them DE equally. Standalone WM is superior (for me).


This is patent troll right? If I am to trust wikipedia, Nokia had nothing to do with the development of HEVC.
The HEVC format was jointly developed by more than a dozen organisations across the world. The majority of active patent contributions towards the development of the HEVC format came from five organizations: Samsung Electronics (4,249 patents), General Electric (1,127 patents),[10] M&K Holdings (907 patents), NTT (878 patents), and JVC Kenwood (628 patents).[11] Other patent holders include Fujitsu, Apple, Canon, Columbia University, KAIST, Kwangwoon University, MIT, Sungkyunkwan University, Funai, Hikvision, KBS, KT and NEC.[12]
Also:
When the MPEG LA terms were announced, commenters noted that a number of prominent patent holders were not part of the group. Among these were AT&T, Microsoft, Nokia, and Motorola. Speculation at the time was that these companies would form their own licensing pool to compete with or add to the MPEG LA pool
Something doesn’t seem right.
I think that is confirmed as Sovereign tech agency (as an initiative of ministry of digital transformation and government modernization) donated to Arch in 2024.
From my knowledge it was the only instance of any such donations by a government to a community project.