Gimp is likely still using gtk2, which means you need a theme that supports gtk2. That’s probably old and un-maintained, since gtk2 has been End-Of-Life for a while now. gimp 3.0 is approaching though.
Linux enthusiast, family man and nerd
Gimp is likely still using gtk2, which means you need a theme that supports gtk2. That’s probably old and un-maintained, since gtk2 has been End-Of-Life for a while now. gimp 3.0 is approaching though.
I don’t see any errors, just warnings. And GTK is very verbose about warnings…
I host mine just like you want to do. Ghost running in a docker container on my homelab, with reverse proxy and domain pointing to it.
Haven’t had any issues so far.
I’ve had a similar issue with most of the laptops I have owned. The battery just discharges slowly when the device is turned off.
I have no idea what causes it or if it can be fixed.
journalctl lists PIDs, so it might have a corresponding executable name with it.
You should block everything, except the things you want to get through. A firewall (at least in Linux) blocks everything inbound by default.
There is currently work being done to get support for some snapdragon laptops into the kernel. I think 6.11 got preliminary support for a couple and patches for others are still waiting.
I don’t use an alias, as the command to update is pretty small to begin with.
But you don’t lower the amount of pixels you use. You just up the amount of pixels used to display a “pixel” when lowering the resolution. So the same amount of power is going to be used to turn those pixels on.
Could be quite a few different things.
Could be the kernel itself, gnupg, openSSH or even bash.
But we won’t know for sure, until it’s publically disclosed.
Gnome 47 is out already though.
I opted for the version with RAM and nvme for $270. had to pay shipping, but no import tax (lucky me). So all in all it was about $300 for me.
And yes I run Linux on it. Arch Linux to be precise. Have not encountered any driver issues.
Exactly. It handles Jellyfin + other services very well.
I bought a “cheap chinesium” one a couple of months back and have not regretted it (yet). It does what it claimed it would.
The one I bought: Aoostar R1
I know it’s active, but most of the stuff being added is not something I use. “Plain old” is a figure of speech for something that is pretty “vanilla”.
mlt was also updated, have you tried downgrading that?
Some stuff in your output relates to mlt.
I doubt they’re outright rejecting any idea of progress. They’re likely just not convinced by what the fancy options offer
Exactly. I don’t mind progress. But terminal emulators that does things you become dependant on, is not great in my opinion. Because what happens the day you only have a TTY to get things done? If you rely on all the fancy stuff, you would feel lost.
So yeah, I am not convinced that I need my terminal emulator to be fancy. But some people clearly are, looking at the rest of the comments on the post.
I can’t see the benefit of fancy terminal emulators. I use plain old Konsole (mostly on Plasma) and as long as it has good history search and multiple tabs, I’m good.
As far as I understand it, TTFs are more basic, while OTF can have more features and glyphs.
They tend to use different theming engines each major version, so I don’t believe they are.