target OS is debian or linux mint

  • boredsquirrel@slrpnk.net
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    6 months ago

    You keep popping up wherever I go these days.

    Funny, I use that name not so long. Currently hyperfocused on Fedora Discuss, Lemmy and Github.

    Although I should really change my stuff to some Forgejo instance and just mirror to Github.

    I thought a lot about tech resiliance in the last days, I am from germany and the people here are stupid. They literally elect people that will make a neofascist surveillance hell reality.

    I wonder how Tor, Tails and others handle their code stuff. Apart from selfhosting their services of course. Like resiliance, I think decentralized code repos are crucial.

    I really like how uBlue just used the official Fedora OCI images (that they produce but dont even use) and used all the container tooling to create this awesome project.

    But relying on Github is insane, it is owned by Microsoft and they dont give a damn about freedom. It is pretty scary, 90% of my Android apps are also on Github.

    I want to build my own variant, KDE and minimal only, maybe GNOME if contributors join. But no more, all the freedom is great but it is huge maintenance.

    H.264 is patent-encumbered so they can’t

    I thought Ciscos trick could fix that? They are a huge company, pay the max amount of money already and can just share the software with their license to anyone.

    inside the Fedora Flatpak

    Not sure if that is the best way. Flatpak has runtime extensions, and rpmfusion could build one for the entire ffmpeg and more. This could just be added from an external repo and installed along.

    Or they include openh264 in their runtime.

    Fedora Flatpaks got quite a boost recently and even have some KDE apps not on Flathub.

    the only way to trust it’s built from the same sources is to reproduce the build.

    Well… rpmfusion could do that? And act like a “3rd party auditor” ?

    doesn’t have support for High 10 Profile video which is fairly common off the web

    Interestesting, never heard that. I use Celluloid Flatpak which is pretty great (I wish Haruna would get their basics together like customizable UI, working subtitles, working queue etc).

    So the only reason to have ffmpeg is nice terminal stuff, Dolphin extensions or just video previews in Dolphin. Nautilus supports that via a Flatpak right? Thats cool.

    we can stop talking about it. I am so sick of talking about H.264.

    Fuck patents. I am happy that we now have AV1 and dont really know why VP9 is not more used? It is a pain!

    Call it a personal challenge or whatever

    I have a command text file with the exact command I need to reproduce my install. One for Fedora Kinoite, one for Kinoite-main.

    It is just a few packages and I really only need the things I mentioned.

    I also dont like Aurora or others that much, they have too much stuff added.

    That’s not true if you’re using Flathub packages.

    True, Flatpak is cool. Dolphin is also available as one, I need to test if it works with Flatpak ark and all that, udisks2, mounting stuff, MTP, maybe SMB.

    prefer Toolbox to Distrobox

    Interesting, why? I need to try it again.

    Do you know btw how to upgrade a F39 distrobox to F40? Distrobox has some “assemble” function to rebuild it with a config file. But traditional dnf system-upgrade doesnt work.

    It’s probably the same reason you use KDE and I use GNOME (most of the time).

    Why? Curious.

    No uBlue uses Anaconda too, which is a whole set of stuff. They are testing the new UI (a component of Anaconda) for workstation exclusively.

    uBlue pioneered in making Anaconda work for installing OCI rpm-ostree btw

    • Spectacle8011@lemmy.comfysnug.space
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      6 months ago

      Looks like we frequent the same circles, then.

      I thought a lot about tech resiliance in the last days, I am from germany and the people here are stupid. They literally elect people that will make a neofascist surveillance hell reality.

      But hey, Germany was responsible for the Sovereign Tech Fund, which has made a big difference for GNOME and accessibility with the Newton stack. So it’s not all bad. Not that I live there.

      But relying on Github is insane, it is owned by Microsoft and they dont give a damn about freedom. It is pretty scary, 90% of my Android apps are also on Github.

      That’s the main reason I don’t use uBlue. The idea of booting my entire operating system from a container created on Github’s infrastructure is just…it scares me. Even though much of the free software I rely on is hosted on Github. And yes, most of my Android apps are also from Github.

      I want to build my own variant, KDE and minimal only, maybe GNOME if contributors join. But no more, all the freedom is great but it is huge maintenance.

      That’s a nice idea. I wonder if Sourcehut does container registries…I know people praise their CI.

      I wonder how Tor, Tails and others handle their code stuff.

      I know Tor uses Gitlab. Seirdy has an article series on “Resilient Git”.

      I thought Ciscos trick could fix that? They are a huge company, pay the max amount of money already and can just share the software with their license to anyone.

      Yes, however it only covers their implementation (which is lacking) and it only covers binaries they create.

      Well… rpmfusion could do that? And act like a “3rd party auditor” ?

      I’m thinking about Fedora including the build in their own repositories. It would be really nice if H.264 decoding was just default and you didn’t need to do anything.

      doesn’t have support for High 10 Profile video which is fairly common off the web

      Interestesting, never heard that.

      See the following thread for all of the research I did: https://discussion.fedoraproject.org/t/h-264-support-in-fedora-workstation-by-default/114521

      Michael Cantazaro had a really helpful and enlightening response: https://discussion.fedoraproject.org/t/h-264-support-in-fedora-workstation-by-default/114521/5

      I use Celluloid Flatpak which is pretty great

      So do I. But keep in mind there are two Celluloid Flatpaks you can install; one is from Fedora Flatpaks which disables H.264/H.265/VC-1 decoding and the other is from Flathub with all features enabled.

      GNOME Software tends to select Fedora Flatpaks first. So users can end up really confused; see: https://github.com/flathub/io.github.celluloid_player.Celluloid/issues/140

      Nautilus supports that via a Flatpak right? Thats cool.

      File previews are supported via the Sushi extension, which is available as a Flatpak. Obviously, it doesn’t work on H.264/H.265/VC-1 media because it’s a Fedora Flatpak.

      I really need ffmpeg because it’s a crucial part of my workflow because I convert so much media. But that’s fine; I just use it in a Toolbox.

      But Nautilus works really well as a Flatpak. It even seems faster than non-Flatpak Nautilus and I have no idea why.

      True, Flatpak is cool. Dolphin is also available as one, I need to test if it works with Flatpak ark and all that, udisks2, mounting stuff, MTP, maybe SMB.

      KDE made a big push to make all of their programs available as Flatpaks. And Snaps. Which I think is great. But you end up in a weird situation where the Krita Flatpak is not officially supported by Krita because no one at Krita works on maintaining the Flatpak. Rather, they support only AppImage officially, probably because it’s easier to maintain their insane patchset than with Flatpak. Not having any experience with distribution systems aside from Flatpak, I really don’t know what niceties Snap or AppImage provides.

      Interesting, why? I need to try it again.

      Nothing much has changed since last you commented on that Toolbox thread I was reading :)

      I think Toolbox is the right way to solve the problem. It’s using a real programming language (Go) instead of bash, it supports a small set of important container images, and those container images are only provided from quay.io, Red Hat’s own infrastructure, instead of Docker Hub.

      But it lacks some features intentionally (and some just because they haven’t gotten around to it). Like distrobox export. Annoying to manually patch in but not hard. I use Toolbox for Signal and Steam because I don’t want to use Unverified Flatpaks.

      Do you know btw how to upgrade a F39 distrobox to F40? Distrobox has some “assemble” function to rebuild it with a config file. But traditional dnf system-upgrade doesnt work.

      I don’t think upgrading Distroboxes or Toolboxes is supported. They’re meant to be destroyed and re-created. Really inconvenient, but I guess the proper way of maintaining toolboxes/distroboxes is through Containerfiles.

      So I don’t use Fedora containers. Or Ubuntu containers. Or Debian containers.

      I use Arch because it’s a rolling release and you just keep updating it. No upgrade problems so far…aside from all the errors I ignore (everything seems to work fine). Also, I really like the Arch userland and it has Signal Desktop in the official repositories.

      It really makes me feel at home on Fedora.

      It’s probably the same reason you use KDE and I use GNOME (most of the time).

      Why? Curious.

      I think GNOME provides a more coherent and consistent experience for users. I’m okay with not having features like a system tray, desktop icons, or window buttons I never use. I really love GNOME. It’s changed the way I use computers and has made everything aside from KDE feel like a completely inferior experience in comparison.

      But I use KDE for my multi-monitor system because frankly, GNOME is an awful experience if you have more than one monitor with different resolutions. KDE kind of sucks too, but it’s not completely broken. KDE is practical by solving problems we have now, like letting XWayland applications scale themselves. Because even if it’s a total hack that works inconsistently, it works very well for most of the software I use. I find parts of KDE overwhelming (especially the System Settings) but hey, it works.

      I like both KDE and GNOME and think each has their own strengths. It’s nice to see KDE adopt one of GNOME’s killer features (partially), the Overview. It’d be nice to see GNOME adopt a KDE feature like CTRL+META+ESC so I can kill windows graphically even on Wayland.

      But god GNOME is annoying when it comes to protocol standardization. At least they’re finally implementing DRM Leasing for VR users (not me).

      Huh. I thought I was supposed to be sticking up for GNOME. Alright, I use GNOME everywhere else and it’s still my favorite desktop by far. They focus on a great experience with what works great now. There are very few hacks in GNOME land. I just think they need to catch up to KDE with Wayland and other areas like the multi-monitor stuff.