I have a Xioami A2 Lite, the version with 3GB of RAM, it runs Android One version 10, it's not so great performance wise but it's sufficient for my needs, anyway, after checking out pm site I found out it's supported via community builds, most of the stuff seem to work, but I'm worried about receiving calls and text messages, I also have some Android apps that I must run (though a container on my laptop would do the job actually but it'll be best if I could run them on the phone), also I don't have an OTG adapter so I'm worried if I'm ever stuck I can't switch TTY and reboot, also my phone's lock button is kinda stuck and needs some weird angle to respond, I have some old extra phone around in the case calls don't work on pm but I'd rather use only a single phone, I have zero use of any bank apps, and I don't have much of experience with roms installing and kernel baking, I have been using GNU/Linux on my laptop for three years and I have good understanding of how things work in a GNU/Linux system, what do you suggest for me? I'm fine staying on Android if that's the best option until I get a new phone
I kinda feel like people don't really care, I mean the ones who care are here and they left these products behind, but we're really a small fraction that barely counts, most just use these stuff, they just don't overthink it.
Are you me? I have a very similar ASUS with similar hw and it's rocking MX 32bit, if you want more cutting edge stuff, you can switch to 32bit Void (xbps is blazing fast, but the docs aren't Arch-wiki-quality)
I think you don't need any special software, the linux kernel recognizes DS4 OOTB as a game controller, I tried it with Flycast (standalone, not libretro's) and it was just plug and play
The point of this post is to find out if people are interested in reading such stuff or it's not worth the trouble.
So I'm a software engineering graduate who grew up and still in Syria, and we can say we have pretty special conditions we live in, power is out most of the time, and the internet connection isn't that good, plus the shit ton of sites that are blocked by US sanctions (even GitHub acts like a removed here), not to mention I have pretty old hardware that I love to use the most of it.
So most of the times I come up with weird workarounds and manual interventions to get stuff working, so I'm thinking about sharing such workarounds and so, both in English and Arabic if people want that too.
I've been using GNU/Linux for quite some time some time so most of my adventures happen on these systems.
So, I would appreciate it if you guys let me know what you think of this, and if you find it worth reading, I don't actually have any idea of where to post my tiny adventures (it's mostly gonna be your usual text and images)
Yes, bad actors can exist everywhere, it doesn't really help anything but fragment the project and harm it, do we need multiple directed forks ? Fuck no it will be best if everyone can monitor and contribute, I kind of think of it as they do peer reviewing in research and shit, it's always better when more people can view it, that will leave less room for biasing and frankly detect bad actors easily
This is just horrible, fuck big tech and their services
I'm pretty sure it will be supported for more than a couple of years, my 930m (not even mx) is still receiving the latest driver updates
One of the biggest things I have built was a experimental 3D physics engine, it did require some memory allocation optimizations, I built a lot of stuff I cannot really list them all in here, An honorable mention would be an FPS game from scratch without a game engine.
I am a fresh software engineering graduate and I am looking for something to improve my problem solving skills, while I did learn about basic algorithms and data structures, I feel like I could learn further more, I know about big O, fast sorting algorithms, dynamic programming, backtracking, binary trees (Although I do not think I know everything about them), I also know about low level memory concepts.
I am sure I forgot to mention some of the stuff I also know about, but I hope the ones I mentioned give a good insights on where I should move onto next.
Soo we have a better GPU
Long story short, I don't have the resources to keep any PC on for a reasonable time, so I want to make use of all the hardware I can find, I have an old iPad 4th generation lying around, I know anything related to programming becomes annoying when using a touchscreen but it's what I got, I don't mind jailbreaking it, or even have a Linux distro that actually works on (I'm fine with compiling stuff myself too)
I'm starting to suspect my HDD failing at this point, so many weird bugs lately
Yes I have polkit installed
Executing startplasma-wayland returns the following:
startplasmacompositor: Could not start D-Bus, Can you call qdbus?
I don't have an excutable/command named qdbus
Yes everything in TTY works as intended, I can login as my user account and sudo works as it should
I came from Arch to Void just today and after installing KDE and enabling dbus, I enabled SDDM, I type in my password and it says login failed, I tried lightdm, I couldn't login neither in my user account nor root, I setup plasma to run with xinit, plasma did launch successfully, but sudo NEVER worked inside plasma, it always says "password incorrect, please try again" even though I'm able to sudo inside TTYs
I tried "sudo sddm" and read the logs, it says SDDM: authentication_FAILED for user "" which is weird (it didn't print any names)
There were also some PAM logs in between, I didn't change any PAM configuration
I have elogind installed and enabled too
I've read some of this article, it doesn't propose any algorithms for my case, I'm super positive about these boundaries.
If there is an offline algorithm that is optimized for my case it could help me around.
I have my YouTube history off and before they disabled shorts feed for people with no history this is how it looked like, creepy af
I need the little paw back so bad
better development machine
By developing on a GNU/Linux VM instead? fuck MS for not finding a suitable solution for developing on their OS for years and shoving an entire another OS inside instead
Maybe it's some marketing thing? Like their feature MUST start with Windows™ regardless of getting confusing as hell, it may also help not techie people who make decisions and want to still use a Windows™ solution suggested by a techie
Rest in peace
I want to use Lua filters in Pandoc but the LSP keeps complaining about not finding pandoc module in globals, I don't have a pandoc-lua executable on my system, only pandoc-cli, and there's no such thing in my package manager either, I've tried pointing workspace.library to pandoc-cli but it didn't work, I'm a Lua noob too, and I'm on Arch, I'm fine if I have to compile Pandoc myself if that solves the problem
I want to compile a docx file into a Typst file, I believe deep down docx is XML, and Typst is close to markdown with interesting functionalities, is that feasible? Note that Typst does have syntax to define functions and call them and I want to create special functions during the code gen step, is ANTLR the right tool for the job? Are there better tools? I want to have as few bugs as possible
Recently I've seen news about adult swim games going delisted probably off steam, one of my fav games is published by adult swim games and I want to know what will happen to it, will steam strike it off my list even if I have it installed? Will I still be able to back it up and restore its backups? Will I still be able to matchmake through steam?
I'm building a sw that should be able to read the papers read from a scanner and process them with a minimal user interaction, basically I don't want the user to jump into another sw, output an image or doc, and insert that into my sw, this kind of problem seems to be fixed when it comes to printers printing, but I couldn't find something similar for scanners (paper scanners especially, I have no use for QR and barcode scanners), the best I could find is USB HID interface, which seems pretty low level and if I'm not wrong device-specific so I have to write the implementation for each model I need to support (please correct me if I'm wrong), I know this is a Linux community but does Windows have something similar too (my sw will probably need to run on it)
Sorry if this isn't the most suitable community
So I've messed up by not formatting my partitions on installation and now things are buggy, dbus returns permission denied on starting is one of the prominent bugs at the moment
Two days ago, I did a fresh Arch install, everything went fine, then I changed my mind about my HDD partitioning and reformatted it, and installed Arch again, the install boots okay and all, but NetworkManager was down, when I investigated it, I found out that dbus service fails to start here is what systemctl status dbus returns:
dbus-broker-launch[383]: launcher_add_services @ ../dbus-broker-35/src/launch/launcher.c +805 dbus-broker-launch[383]: launcher_run @ ../dbus-broker-35/src/launch/launcher.c +1416 dbus-broker-launch[383]: run @ ../dbus-broker-35/src/launch/main.c +152 dbus-broker-launch[383]: main @ ../dbus-broker-35/src/launch/main.c +178 dbus-broker-launch[383]: Exiting due to fatal error: -107
I've run journalctl with some filtering and found this too:
systemd-tmpfiles[327]: Detected unsafe path transition / (owned by 999) -> /var (owned by root) during canonicalization of var/lib/dbus systemd-tmpfiles[327]: Detected unsafe path transition / (owned by 999) -> /run (owned by root) during canonicalization of run/dbus
I ran ls / -l and found out that my boot partition is owned by a user named 999 and group adm (what the hell is this?)
I've tried installing dbus-daemon-units and remove dbus-broker and dbus-broker-units, now I got a different problem which was that dbus was timing out on start, so the problem might not be caused by dbus itself, I really don't want to reinstall Arch again, I'm chrooting into my install for internet connection too
So I've had enough from partitioning my HDD between Linux and Windows, and I want to go full Linux, my laptop is low end and I tend to keep some development services alive when I work on stuff (like MariaDB's) so I decided to split my HDD into three partitions, a distro (Arch) for my dev stuff, a distro (Pop OS) for gaming, and a huge shared home partition, what are the disadvantages of using a shared home (yes with a shared profile, I still want to access my Steam library from Arch if I want that)
Another thing that concerns me is GRUB, usually when I'm dualbooting with Windows, the Linux distro takes care of the grub stuff, should only a single distro take care of GRUB? or I need to install "the grub package" on both? Do both distros need separate boot partitions? Or a single one for a single distro (like a main distro) will suffice?
Another off topic question, my HDD is partitioned to oblivion, can I safely delete ALL partitions? Including the EFI one? I'm not on a MacBook, a typical 2014 Toshiba that's my laptop