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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BB
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1 yr. ago

  • Oh, I am already on Plasma 6.7, it updated to that maybe around a week ago or so! That long press is at least more streamlined that the Compose key, so that's something! Good to know, thank you a bunch, I didn't know about that feature :)

  • I have the original Halo75 (not the V2) which sadly doesn't support QMK/VIA yet. I remember there was some dedicated app to configure the keyboard (NuPhy Console maybe?) but I don't know if it's worth trying to get that to work on Linux and that seems to be basically abandoned/obsolete

  • Thank you for your answer!

    1. I had already tried that before but forgot to mention it, in Mac mode it flips the function/media key behavior as expected; in Windows mode, it does nothing (the function keys still always act like media keys, no matter what)
    2. Not quite sure what that would do, maybe I'm misunderstanding you, that seems to just type the angle brackets that are on the layout in Windows mode and nothing in Mac mode
    3. I just tried that, and while it does work, it is very unintuitive to me (instead of just Alt+Q to get an ä, it's now

      <Compose>

      , followed by Shift+' to get a double quote, and then a/o/u to get the umlaut. That would be suboptimal for me at best, but I'll keep it in mind as a backup solution

    I'll keep looking for and trying some more options :)

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    Fedora/KDE keyboard woes

  • Correct me if I'm wrong, but, regarding the first point, in what way are the calendar clients proprietary? Unless I am missing something, the clients for iOS and Android are open source and licensed under GPLv3 while the desktop client (part of the mail app) appears to be licensed under AGPL v3.

    The email system not working with Thunderbird etc. out-of-the-box is true but that is kind of understandable, considering that the emails are only stored and transmitted to the first-party clients in an encrypted form that other clients couldn't work with? And you could use the mail bridge (which is also open source, if I am not mistaken) to expose them as a local server to be used by Thunderbird etc., right? Maybe not ideal but I'd agrue it's "fine".

    I do agree that there are things to dislike about Proton but those two don't seem like problems in my opinion...

  • I saw the movie earlier and I found it overall decent. Not bad, but not great either. I'm far from a critic and I'm not too picky about movies, but this post popped up in my feed, so this is just my two cents as someone who generally enjoys Markipliers content and his previous larger productions.

    I personally found the visuals and especially the camera work quite good, I didn't actually mind the fact that the camera never left the submarine (although maybe it would have made for some more exciting shots). I thought the sound design was pretty good as well.

    The story (or lack thereof) was the weakest part in my opinion. The first half was pretty uneventful and the second half was too random and disconnected for my taste. It left me feeling like I didn't really get what went on in the end.

    In the end, I'm happy that I saw the movie and I think it definitely showcases some good skills, but with a lot left to improve :)

  • In case you missed it in the article, the transfer speeds are mentioned just two paragraphs prior to the one you cited:

    Over the next three to four years, Kazansky said, SPhotonix aims to improve the data transfer speed of its technology from a write time of 4 megabytes per second (MBps) and read time of 30 MBps to a read/write speed of 500 MBps, which would be competitive with archival tape backup systems.