Just wanted to show off the lowest end hardware I ever ran Linux on
Single core, 32 bit CPU, can't even do video playback on VLC. But it kinda works for some offline work, like text editing, and even emulation through zsnes! It's crazy how Linux keeps old hardware like this running.
Thankfully though, this laptop CPU is upgradable, and so is the ram, so I'm planning on revitalizing and bringing this old Itautec to the 21st century 😄
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L'ambulanza di Vancouver che investì un uomo durante il suo primo giorno di servizio
L'ambulanza di Vancouver che investì un uomo durante il suo primo giorno di servizio
Nel 1909 la prima ambulanza di Vancouver, nel suo primissimo giorno di servizio, accidentalmente investì e uccise un passanteAlessandro Marinucci (Storia Che Passione)
Adult Problems
Adult Problems
Instance PeerTube généraliste, une bonne alternative à YouTube et autres plateformes de streaming contrôlées par des géants du WEB. General PeerTube instance, a good alternative to YouTube and other streaming platforms controlled by WEB giants.Mes Numériques
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New Linux Users
New Linux Users
Instance PeerTube généraliste, une bonne alternative à YouTube et autres plateformes de streaming contrôlées par des géants du WEB. General PeerTube instance, a good alternative to YouTube and other streaming platforms controlled by WEB giants.Mes Numériques
1 month later:
Searches for how to view pictures, videos, and browse via the terminal
like this
Check out the demo for Paris Transylvania, a pachinko roguelike deckbuilder
Check out the demo for Paris Transylvania, a pachinko roguelike deckbuilder
Another one with a good demo during Steam Next Fest is Paris Transylvania, a pachinko roguelike deckbuilder.Liam Dawe (GamingOnLinux)
Download festival rockers told to take off smartwatches after moshpits spark emergency alerts
Download rockers told to take off smartwatches after moshpit ‘collisions’ cause accidental 999 calls
Police received nearly 700 false emergency alerts from Leicestershire heavy metal event last yearHarriet Sherwood (The Guardian)
That title was unparsable for my brain.
Turns out there is a festival called “download festival”. My brain couldn’t get past that.
Coinbase sponsoring the parade is the most honest thing the Pentagon's done in years, admitting who they really work for
Coinbase sponsoring the parade is the most honest thing the Pentagon's done in years, admitting who they really work for
Instance PeerTube généraliste, une bonne alternative à YouTube et autres plateformes de streaming contrôlées par des géants du WEB. General PeerTube instance, a good alternative to YouTube and other streaming platforms controlled by WEB giants.Mes Numériques
Tehran University Professor Seyed Mohammad Marandi rips apart the idiots at Sky News
Tehran University Professor Seyed Mohammad Marandi rips apart the idiots at Sky News
Instance PeerTube généraliste, une bonne alternative à YouTube et autres plateformes de streaming contrôlées par des géants du WEB. General PeerTube instance, a good alternative to YouTube and other streaming platforms controlled by WEB giants.Mes Numériques
Israel f****d around and now it is finding out
Israel f****d around and now it is finding out
It's time for Israel to learn the hard wayRicky Hale (Council Estate Media)
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Giuseppe Iannozzi in libreria con "Sorella di Perfezione" (LFA Publisher)
Giuseppe Iannozzi in libreria con "Sorella di Perfezione" (LFA Publisher)
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La tigre della guerra è uscita dalla gabbia
Texting myself the weather every day
Texting myself the weather every day
My personal website. Hopefully always being updated!bensilverman.co.uk
why didnt Enlightenment desktop recieve much adoption
Hi lemmy
So i was curious why Enlightenment didn't recieve much adoption in the Linux Desktop. (especially for a fully featured lightweight wayland DE)
Ik Bodhi Linux uses Enlightenment, but it's more of Moksha rather then using Enlightenment
Cause
- Lighter then LXQT
- Somewhat customizable
But I can see people not liking it cause.
- the ui(especially for windows users)
- Hard to find themes due to it using its own toolkit
like this
Adaptive Keyboards & Writing Technologies For One-Handed Users
Adaptive Keyboards & Writing Technologies For One-Handed Users
After having been involved in an accident, [Kurt Kohlstedt] suffered peripheral neuropathy due to severe damage to his right brachial plexus — the network of nerves that ultimately control th…Hackaday
adhocfungus likes this.
BlackRock’s Bitcoin Scheme: How Wall Street Giants Are Bilking Poor People Out of Money
Get ready to have your mind blown by “BlackRock’s Bitcoin Scheme: How Wall Street Giants Are Bilking Poor People Out of Money.” This video dives deep into the shocking reality behind the Bitcoin hype and exposes how BlackRock and other Wall Street titans are quietly taking over the crypto world while everyday people are left holding the bag.
In “BlackRock’s Bitcoin Scheme: How Wall Street Giants Are Bilking Poor People Out of Money,” you’ll learn how just 1% of entities control nearly 90% of all Bitcoin, and how BlackRock alone has amassed over 530,000 BTC—making them the second-largest holder on the planet. The video breaks down how institutional giants use thousands of wallets to hide their concentration of wealth, while the media and crypto influencers keep pushing the myth of “decentralization.”
We’ll also reveal how new deregulation moves—like Trump’s rollback of IRS crypto broker rules and the SEC’s so-called “innovation-friendly” policies—are making it even easier for Wall Street to dominate, while retail investors get crushed by scams and volatility. “BlackRock’s Bitcoin Scheme: How Wall Street Giants Are Bilking Poor People Out of Money” is your wake-up call: Bitcoin isn’t the revolution you were promised. It’s become another playground for the rich, and the real winners are the same financial giants you thought you were escaping.
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Scientists spot ‘superorganism’ in the wild for the first time and it’s made of worms, In a groundbreaking discovery, scientists have observed nematodes, tiny worms, forming 'living towers' in nature
Scientists spot ‘superorganism’ in the wild for the first time — and it’s made of worms
Science News: In a groundbreaking discovery, scientists have observed nematodes, tiny worms, forming 'living towers' in natural settings for the first time. ResearcTOI Science Desk (Times Of India)
Millions protest throughout the US against Trump’s efforts to establish a dictatorship
Mass protests throughout the US against Trump’s efforts to establish a dictatorship
Mass protests are taking place today in more than 2,000 cities and towns across the United States in opposition to the Trump administration’s fascist assault on immigrants and its escalating drive to establish a presidential dictatorship.World Socialist Web Site
Introducing premium accounts to fund the matrix.org homeserver
🔗TL;DR
As we need to take more concrete steps to improve the financial situation of the Foundation, we will be rolling out a freemium offer for the matrix.org homeserver users. The alternative is to turn off the server, which we want to avoid doing. The goal is for the most active users to support the cost of the service. Free users will have limits on how they can use the service (mostly around media). The change can be supported by any client with limited to no development. Premium plans will be rolled out over the summer, and we will be iterating on the exact scope in the first few weeks. The Homeserver Terms and Privacy Policy will be updated accordingly and deployed in the coming weeks.
This Week in Matrix 2025-06-13
Matrix, the open protocol for secure decentralised communicationsThib (matrix.org)
Sabato 28 giugno 2025 a Agugliano (AN) “Libera Repubblica di Castel d’Emilio”
Il Grand Tour delle Marche fa tappa a Castel d’Emilio, borgo medievale nel comune di Agugliano (AN), incastonato tra le colline della “Terra dei Castelli”. Qui, Enrico Friziero, imprenditore padovano, ha ricreato un angolo di Veneto con l’apertura di un Bacaro e di un albergo diffuso (Relais Castel d’Emilio), ridando vita al borgo.
Sabato 28 giugno il borgo si trasformerà simbolicamente nella Libera Repubblica di Castel d’Emilio, con un evento speciale dedicato a questa “enclave veneta” nelle Marche.
Il programma inizia alle 15.30 con una caccia al tesoro per le vie del borgo dal titolo L’isola fantasma di Venezia. Alle 18.00, in piazza, Cesare Catà metterà in scena lo spettacolo La Geniale Cortigiana, con Pamela Olivieri (recitazione) e Fabio Capponi (musiche). Si racconterà la vita di Veronica Franco, cortigiana-poetessa veneziana del '500, figura simbolo di cultura e ribellione.
Alle 21.30 gran finale con il concerto di Gazebo, icona della Italo disco anni ’80, autore di successi che hanno venduto oltre 12 milioni di dischi.
Durante la giornata, al Bacaro Busèto e Bottòn, si potranno assaporare specialità venete come folpi, sarde in saor, cicheti, spritz leggendari e vini, con incursioni gastronomiche anche nelle Marche.
Ad arricchire l’atmosfera, figuranti in maschere veneziane del ‘700.
Tutti gli spettacoli sono gratuiti. Sarà presente anche una delegazione di Emergency, a cui destinare donazioni libere.
Sabato 28 giugno 2025 a Agugliano (AN) "Libera Repubblica di Castel d’Emilio" - ViaggieMiraggi
Sabato 28 giugno 2025 evento speciale del Grand Tour delle Marche La Libera Repubblica di Castel d’Emilio apre le porte al Veneto nel cuore delle Marche In programma animazioni, degustazioni, spettacoli ed attrazioni varie Il Grand Tour delle Marche …Redazione (ViaggieMiraggi)
fazzoletto scancanato tra sporcizia e disordine!!!
Ecco stamattina un nuovo rapporto sullo stato delle cose del mio mondo scombinato, concentrato su un ennesimo dettaglio che nessuno ha chiesto ma che tutti meritano di conoscere… anche perché è sempre bene rimarcare accuratamente i miei territori (la mia cameretta e il mio blog): un fazzoletto che è rimasto sulla mia scrivania, dopo aver […]
List all existing program paths from your Bash's history. (Bash One Liner)
It only works with the first command in the recorded history, not with any sub shells or chained commands.
\#!/usr/bin/env bash
# 1. history and $HISTFILE do not work in scripts. Therefore cat with a direct
# path is needed.
# 2. awk gets the first part of the command name.
# 3. List is then sorted and duplicate entries are removed.
# 4. type -P will expand command names to paths, similar to which. But it will
# also expand aliases and functions.
# 5. Final output is then sorted again.
type -P $(cat ~/.bash_history | awk '{print $1}' | sort | uniq) | sort
After reading a blog post, I had this script in mind to see if its possible. This is just for fun and I don't have an actual use for it. Maybe some parts of it might inspire you to do something too. So have fun.
Edit 1:
After some suggestions from the comments, here is a little shorter version. sort | uniq
can be replaced by sort -u
, as the output of them should be identical in this case (in certain circumstances they can have different effect!). Also someone pointed out my useless cat
, as the file can be used directly with awk
. And for good reason. 😁 Enjoy, and thanks for all.
type -P $(awk '{print $1}' ~/.bash_history | sort -u) | sort
I still have no real use case for this one liner, its mainly just for fun.
As I've been working on an install script for making my setup more portable, this is handy and timely. Thanks for sharing!
PS I hate to be the UUOC person. I'm sure you're already aware and it was a deliberate choice.
PS I hate to be the UUOC person. I’m sure you’re already aware and it was a deliberate choice.
I wish it was. I honestly forgot. yeah, shame on me. 😁 Before this, at the position of cat there was actually a different command, which I replaced with this. And I didn't think of adding the file to awk instead. I'll update the line with this suggestion and a suggestion from someone else.
Bon Iver – Bon Iver (2011)
Bon Iver è il secondo album in studio della band indie folk americana Bon Iver, pubblicato il 17 giugno 2011. L'album è composto da 10 canzoni ed è stato visto come una nuova direzione musicale per la band... Leggi e ascolta...
Clarifying Costs of Running the Fediverse with Jerry from Infosec.Exchange
Clarifying Costs of Running the Fediverse with Jerry from Infosec.Exchange
I decided since I don't understand how all of this works, I will just simply ask Jerry personally about all of this data and technical details, so that people will no longer be confused about all of this.blenderdumbass . org
Rozaŭtuno likes this.
Bitcoin Core (BTC) vs. Bitcoin Cash (BCH) - Which is the Real Bitcoin?
Bitcoin Core (BTC) vs. Bitcoin Cash (BCH) - Which is the Real Bitcoin?
Source: https://youtu.be/Hieb9b4XQ8AOdysee
Which path sounds better to you?
Monero
I have nothing against Bitcoin Cash. I just see no need for it.
The issue with Monero is that it cannot scale to world adoption levels.
It is fine as a niche coin for certain use cases and I like it as well but I have migrated to BCH as it is the future.
The stress test a year ago showed Monero tops out ~700k TX per day and node problems started around 300-500k. This is likely a fundamental flaw and will not be able to go much beyond this TX volume unless there is a complete redesign/rewrite.
BCH has good privacy with CashFusion and in a couple of years it will have 100% private tokens, we will have Monero as a token on BCH. This is much better because we get full access to all exchanges that BCH is on plus world scale and supreme privacy.
My bet is on BCH.
What GNU + Linux software could enable deep integration of backup, sync, and transfer; just as convenient and beginner-friendly (edit: and efficient) as what Apple provides?
- iCloud backup restore or peer-to-peer transfer, very early in the device setup process
- Two ways for things to be stored in iCloud, each with a corresponding list of per-app (not per-folder) toggle switches in iCloud Settings
- "Saved to iCloud" normal syncing
- Requires apps to use the right APIs and to handle conflicting changes
- Allows same data to be read and modified by multiple devices
- iCloud backup
- Available for all apps
- Separate backup per device
- Only downloaded when setting up a new device
- In app sandboxes, only excludes
tmp
(Flatpak equivalent is somewhere in /run
) and Library/Caches
(equivalent to cache
directory in Flatpak sandbox) by default- Allows apps to set
isExcludedFromBackup
attribute for specific files (useful for things that are easy to recreate via download but are expected by the user to not be automatically deleted)- Includes system configuration such as home screen layout
- Backs up a list of installed apps without backing up their executables and assets
- Synced list of previously installed apps, not separate per-device
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Rust for Linux - Rust NL 2025
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
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Curate your shell history
Curate your shell history
You can make your shell history more useful by removing the typos and false starts.Benjamin Esham
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Is this some sort of bash/zsh joke that I'm too fish to understand?
Okay I can see how curating could work. But if you're lazy like me, I recommend this:
GitHub - PatrickF1/fzf.fish: 🔍🐟 Fzf plugin for Fish
🔍🐟 Fzf plugin for Fish. Contribute to PatrickF1/fzf.fish development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
L'avulso codice dell'arco-lancia, antesignano della baionetta tra i popoli dell'Alto Medioevo - Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri
L'avulso codice dell'arco-lancia, antesignano della baionetta tra i popoli dell'Alto Medioevo - Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri
Non è difficile comprendere perché, in termini di reperti archeologici che sono giunti fino a noi in condizioni adatte allo studio, la quantità di spade ed altri implementi metallici risulta maggiore delle armi a lunga gittata, ivi inclusi archi, gia…Jacopo (Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri)
I’m accidentally becoming a #FediMerch guy.
Shiny stickers
Last year, I wrote a blog post, Fediverse for Freedom – which was about the importance of a free and open Fediverse, and how and why public institutions can support it. Since then, I’ve referred to this blog post in many of my talks and in conversations, and started to use the hashtag #FediverseForFreedom.
Ahead of FOSDEM back in February, I created some stickers to share – a Fediverse logo, overlaid with the text “I Am Part Of The Rebel Alliance #FediverseForFreedom”. They were quite a hit at the time, and since then I’ve used the same image in presentations. When people have seen them, I’ve quite often been asked where they came from.
Last week, Elena Rossini – writer of the fantastic The Future is Federated blog/newsletter, talented filmmaker and photographer, and (perhaps) the Fediverse’s Number One Fan – released a great, four minute video that both explains and promotes the Fediverse and open platforms not owned by billionaires1
videos.elenarossini.com/videos…
One of the stickers shows up in several shots of the the video, and once again, I heard that people would like to be able to get some for themselves.
A simple site
I’ve been wanting to make the stickers available for a while, but the release of the video finally pushed me into getting this done!
I’d recently bought some stickers myself, from the talented Robb Knight, and he mentioned that he used Stripe Payment Links for his site. I already had a Stripe account, so thought I’d try the same thing.
So: now you can visit fediverseforfreedom.org (.com points to .org), and click on a link to to get a handful of stickers shipped in your direction! You can also easily just tell your friends, “oh yeah, I got them from Fediverse For Freedom dot org”. Nice and straightforward.A small pile of I Am Part Of The Rebel Alliance stickers
There’s a bit more information about it all on that simple site, but I thought it might be interesting to write down a bit more about how I made it.
The site is running on Codeberg Pages. Previously I’ve put these kinds of one-off, single page sites up on GitHub Pages, or on Glitch. I’m feeling increasingly less comfortable about having all of my stuff on GitHub and hosted in the US; and, unfortunately, Glitch is going away soon (more on this in a future post). So in this case I chose Codeberg Pages, although I’m aware that they are themselves a platform that is currently in maintenance mode. I’m open to suggestions for similar sites, as I’ll need to migrate some Glitch apps somewhere very soon!
Apart from that: the whole operation is very low tech. Stripe Payment Links are convenient – Stripe itself can handle a huge variety of payment types – but, on the backend… it does not do much. No order acknowledgement emails, order management tools, or anything like that. All I get is a basic dashboard with information about the orders. I whipped up some simple Python that uses the Stripe API to grab the postal addresses of orders, and then creates SVG address labels for printing. The same code also grabs the email addresses so that I can send an email thanking the customer for the order.
In terms of shipping, that’s also a manual process – no “drop-shipping” here, I’m getting the stickers from my regular supplier (StickerApp), putting them in envelopes, and posting them out myself. That also means that delivery times will vary – although I had enough in stock to cover all of the initial orders, I’ve also been in Amsterdam for the past 3 days, so the first batch will go out on Monday.
One more thing I’m experimenting with here is GoatCounter, just to get a sense of traffic and interest. I didn’t want to put a load of invasive Google Analytics onto such a basic page, and I’ve had GoatCounter recommended to me a few times now – like Mastodon, it has also benefited from NLNet funding from the European Union in the past, and I wanted to see what was possible. It seems to do just what I wanted, whilst also being unintrusive.
What’s next?
Look… I don’t intend to become some kind of merch magnate, but I do know that some people share my own desire to display our commitment to the Fediverse and related causes, and if I can help folks to do so, then I will (did you know we already made a t-shirt? Elena has asked me for more in the same vein!).
If you want to look for other ways to show your support in public, and to give back to people or projects that work on tools that you use, take a look at the Awesome Fediverse Merch list that Jeff Sikes is curating. Plenty of options for everyone.
Finally – remember to support the creators of your favourite sites, services, and open source software directly, whenever you can!
- Remember, as I heard in a keynote at the PublicSpaces conference this week: “the Internet is currently controlled by four or five fucked up right wing white men” – it’s time to rewild the internet, and take ownership of our data and choices. ↩︎
Share this post from your fediverse server
https:// Share
This server does not support sharing. Please visit .
andypiper.co.uk/2025/06/14/par…
#100DaysToOffload #FediMerch #fediverse #FediverseForFreedom #merch #sticker #stripe #swag #webApp
📺 Introducing the Fediverse: a New Era of Social Media
A 4 minute video that aims to introduce the Fediverse to people not familiar with itElena Rossini
Io ero il milanese
Io ero il milanese | S1E10 | Rinascita | RaiPlay Sound
10. Rinascita - Io ero il milanese - "Io ho dovuto ricostruire tutto. Partire dalle macerie e rimettere su un cantiere intorno a me. Ho dovuto ricostruire, partire da zero. Demolisco quell'immagine che le persone avevano di me.RaiPlaySound
La traduzione simultanea di Google, fantascienza diventata realtà
La traduzione simultanea di Google, fantascienza diventata realtà
Google sbaraglia i concorrenti. Apple aspetta tempi migliori, ma del resto il silenzio è ancora compatibile con la privacyMassimiliano Parente (il Giornale)
informapirata likes this.
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Todd Haynes, Mark Ruffalo – „Vergiftete Wahrheit“ (2019)
Hollywood kann so viel mehr als Eskapismus – das beweist dieses leise, wütende Justizdrama über einen der größten Umweltskandale der US-Geschichte. Mark Ruffalo spielt den Anwalt, der gegen den Chemiekonzern DuPont kämpft – und gegen die Gleichgültigkeit der Öffentlichkeit. Ein Film, der nicht beruhigt, sondern verstört. Und der noch lange nach dem Abspann weiterarbeitet… (ARD/One)
[Patch Notes] 3.26.0 Hotfix 5
3.26.0 Hotfix 5
- Re-enabled progression in Kirac's Vault Pass.
- Fixed a "GetAdapterInfo" client crash that could occur when launching the game.
Patch Notes - 3.26.0 Hotfix 5 - Forum - Path of Exile
Path of Exile is a free online-only action RPG under development by Grinding Gear Games in New Zealand.Path of Exile
[Patch Notes] 3.26.0 Hotfix 4
3.26.0 Hotfix 4
- Added Opt-In Party Member UI to Mercenary Encounters.
- Prevented the Fallen Reverend Mercenary from summoning far too many spectres when encountered.
- Lowered damage significantly on Greater Shock Nova and Vaal Flameblast Mercenary Skills. Greater Shock Nova reduction will only apply to enemy Mercenaries. Vaal Flameblast reduction will apply both when allied and when an enemy.
- Fixed a bug where a legacy chance to Suppress Spell Damage modifier could roll on Veiled Body Armours and a legacy increased Critical Strike Chance during Flask Effect modifier could roll on Cinderswallow Urn.
- Fixed a deserialise packet packet crash that could occur on the login screen.
- Fixed a client crash related to the Phrecian Magistrate Character Effect.
- Fixed two instance crashes.
You will need to restart your client to receive the client changes in this hotfix.
Patch Notes - 3.26.0 Hotfix 4 - Forum - Path of Exile
Path of Exile is a free online-only action RPG under development by Grinding Gear Games in New Zealand.Path of Exile
How can we combine two audio recording inputs (mics) into one audio input source in Manjaro?
My partner and I are running Manjaro and very new to it. Trying to switch as much as possible over to daily use with Manjaro.
We have pipewire, not pulseaudio
We record multiple times a week on OBS, and my partner and I are in the same room. We have two mics side by side both inputs going into my PC. Linux, and therefore OBS, are recognizing the two mic inputs separately as you might expect.
OBS can set up both of these separate inputs, but the issue is we're having significant problems with echo and the noise suppression/noise gates are not sufficient.
This was not an issue on windows, where we used Voicemeeter to combine our inputs into one mic for OBS. I am looking to emulate that on Linux to see if it solves our problems.
We have tried a mic merge sink, but it creates an OUTPUT device, not an input device.
SOLUTION:
QPWGraph was the answer (or something like it, Helvum was also recommended) While it looks intimidating at first you just need to understand it's a series of outputs and inputs and you play mix and match. This allowed us to take the outputs of the mics and connect them directly to a single OBS mic source. This 100% did all that Voicemeeter was doing for us, and the results were also the same.
We do not experience echo, overlap, feedback, or any of the issues we were having by adding the two mics separately in OBS. Our issue was NOT the setup, as some people focused on here. As soon as we got the mics going into that same input, all was good and we successfully ran a recording session 100% in Manjaro.
In the end, this did everything we wanted from Voicemeeter + MORE, as I can now isolate different outputs as well. So for instance in recordings I can manage the volume of discord and the background music separately. So this was an amazing solution and the result was exactly what was needed, and ultimately was much easier than Voicemeeter.
Thank you to those here that recommended it, and the people at the Manjaro forums.
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I've just created an OBS audio capture device, then opened qpwgraph and put both mic's into it.
It should do what you want, but I am not sure that will fix the problem. Give it a shot and let us know.
I definitely recommend playing around with easyeffects a bit more as well.
[Patch Notes] 3.26.0 Hotfix 3
3.26.0 Hotfix 3
- Changed DirectX12 to be the default Renderer, which also helps players who were experiencing device errors under DirectX11. Clients on DirectX11 will automatically switch to this if supported but can change back if needed. The "(default)" text next to this will be updated in a later patch.
- Fixed an bug where vendor windows would not save the search filter after clearing the textbox.
- Fixed a client crash on the Steam login screen.
You will need to restart your client to receive the client changes in this hotfix.
Patch Notes - 3.26.0 Hotfix 3 - Forum - Path of Exile
Path of Exile is a free online-only action RPG under development by Grinding Gear Games in New Zealand.Path of Exile
[Patch Notes] 3.26.0 Hotfix 2
3.26.0 Hotfix 2
- Fixed a bug where Smoulderstrike Mercenaries failed to spawn with Unique Weapons equipped correctly.
- Fixed a client crash related to the King of the Faridun Armour Set.
- Fixed the DLSS option not being available on Steam.
Patch Notes - 3.26.0 Hotfix 2 - Forum - Path of Exile
Path of Exile is a free online-only action RPG under development by Grinding Gear Games in New Zealand.Path of Exile
ODF: An Analysis of the Adoption of the Open Document Format
ODF: An Analysis of the Adoption of the Open Document Format - The Document Foundation Blog
Over the course of its 20-year history, the ODF standard has been adopted, or at least recommended, by numerous supranational bodies and several countries on almost every continent.Italo Vignoli (The Document Foundation)
2025 Medina Juneteenth Celebration
Medina held their fourth annual Juneteenth celebration at the town square today. I was able to check out some of it, even with the wet weather. It was the Sanyuka Children’s Choir from Uganda who impressed me the most with their energy and dancing. Kenny Crumpton from Fox 8’s Kickin’ It With Kenny and Danita Harris from WKYC Channel 3 were also featured guest speakers at the event.
Medina Juneteenth Welcome Banner
2025 Medina Juneteenth Celebration
Photo by Kevin GaminThe Sanyuka Children’s Choir
2025 Medina Juneteenth Celebration
Photo by Kevin GaminThe Sanyuka Children’s Choir
2025 Medina Juneteenth Celebration
Photo by Kevin GaminChannel 3 anchorwoman Danita Harris
2025 Medina Juneteenth Celebration
Photo by Kevin Gamin
2025-06-14 Medina Juneteenth Celebration
Explore this photo album by Kevin Gamin on Flickr!Kevin Gamin (Flickr)
Free NetBSD server user account only for educational purposes
Greetings,
I recently setup my own NetBSD server to learn more about selfhosting and Unix. I am sharing it with anyone who also want to learn about command line and server stuff and will be also providing mentorship ( not an expert but know enough to at least teach begginers).
stuff I can teach using that server:
- basic command line
- how to host stuff like static HTML pages
- ssh concepts
- hosting http alternative like Gemini, Gopher etc
- scripting in Bash, Python etc
so yeah, if you think you or someone else is interested in learning NetBSD share this post with them 😀
( again this is just for begginers only please don't sign up if you are already an expert or intermediate )
( this is my mail alias I put to avoid spammers so don't be afraid of it sawura19.zofeta41@murena.io )
Diabolo96
in reply to merci3 • • •merci3
in reply to Diabolo96 • • •Diabolo96
in reply to merci3 • • •slothrop
in reply to merci3 • • •So, not a
Potato ?
merci3
in reply to slothrop • • •Flamekebab
in reply to merci3 • • •Whilst the Celeron was indeed utter cack, 2 GB has me making four Yorkshiremen-style "2GB? Luxury!" style comments.
I used to run Ubuntu on my Acer Aspire 1362 WMLi back in 2005. I had 512 MB of RAM and a 2800+ Sempron processor.
That said, looking at this:
cpubenchmark.net/compare/1351v…
My old Sempron was a better CPU than that piece of junk Celeron you've got there. Giving it 2GB of RAM is hilarious!
Mobile AMD Sempron 2800+ vs Intel Celeron M 1.60GHz [cpubenchmark.net] by PassMark Software
www.cpubenchmark.netmerci3
in reply to Flamekebab • • •Flamekebab
in reply to merci3 • • •I assume it was made to upsell people to better CPUs. Celerons have always been awful.
That said, if Win7 came preinstalled then we're talking about different eras of Celeron, at least, I cannot imagine it would be as mediocre as a low-mid AMD CPU from 2004!
I always think of an ex of mine defending criticism of her craptop. "It was good for its time!" No, no it wasn't. It was built around a Celeron. It was built to be trash. It was ewaste with extra steps.
vrighter
in reply to Flamekebab • • •Hule
in reply to vrighter • • •Man, does 384 sound weird!
I know it was a 256 MB and a 128 MB stick... but it was a long time ago..
vrighter
in reply to Hule • • •wewbull
in reply to merci3 • • •I think my lowest was a 33 MHz 486sx (maybe DX) with 8MB of RAM.
I wouldn't want to try it today though.
Grimtuck
in reply to wewbull • • •wewbull
in reply to Grimtuck • • •Rose
in reply to wewbull • • •folekaule
in reply to Rose • • •dylanmorgan
in reply to folekaule • • •folekaule
in reply to dylanmorgan • • •I have not been able to find the case again since. It was a local shop that built it from parts, so it was not a big brand. I didn't pick the parts either, since I knew nothing about PCs at the time, and it showed lol.
Edit: it was a white/beige mini tower. If I recall correctly, it was similar to a lot of cases at the time, with a black band across and a circular button on the right. The turbo and reset buttons were pink and teal in the shape of triangles. I purchased it in 1992 when I needed a PC for college.
vandsjov
in reply to folekaule • • •folekaule
in reply to vandsjov • • •addie
in reply to wewbull • • •dylanmorgan
in reply to wewbull • • •fmstrat
in reply to wewbull • • •selokichtli
in reply to wewbull • • •wewbull
in reply to selokichtli • • •selokichtli
in reply to wewbull • • •Yeah, this is the way.
scott
in reply to merci3 • • •merci3
in reply to scott • • •LeFantome
in reply to scott • • •scott
in reply to LeFantome • • •hexagonwin
in reply to merci3 • • •Celeron M with 2GB ram? That's actually not low at all 😛
I bet it runs NetBSD or Tinycore flawlessly
merci3
in reply to hexagonwin • • •hexagonwin
in reply to merci3 • • •merci3
in reply to hexagonwin • • •LeFantome
in reply to merci3 • • •Debian will not run on Pentium anymore. It is not performance, it is compiler options. You need a i686 (Pentium Pro). This means none of the Debian derivatives will either.
Adelie, Arch32, and T2 all still run on Pentium though I believe.
[edit: sorry, I saw Pentium 75 from the comment above - Celeron M should be fine]
fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
in reply to hexagonwin • • •rollmagma
in reply to merci3 • • •psyc
in reply to merci3 • • •arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/0…
Considering they just dropped i486 support this year I’d say you’re running this on a super computer by comparison
Linux kernel is leaving 486 CPUs behind, only 18 years after the last one made
Kevin Purdy (Ars Technica)otacon239
in reply to merci3 • • •Flamekebab
in reply to otacon239 • • •otacon239
in reply to Flamekebab • • •DragonofKnowledge
in reply to merci3 • • •fishsayhelo
in reply to DragonofKnowledge • • •DragonofKnowledge
in reply to fishsayhelo • • •gjoel
in reply to merci3 • • •Hule
in reply to gjoel • • •Ackshually.. I also had an AMD K5 with Performance Rating 100.
K6 was 166 MHz and up, Pentium II competitor.
pastermil
in reply to merci3 • • •2GB of RAM? Low?
Were you born after the year 2000?
like this
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merci3
in reply to pastermil • • •like this
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tonyn
in reply to merci3 • • •like this
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tonyn
in reply to merci3 • • •like this
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whaleross
in reply to tonyn • • •like this
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dylanmorgan
in reply to whaleross • • •phantomwise
in reply to dylanmorgan • • •Hule
in reply to phantomwise • • •You had one job.
Mentioning punch cards had me, but you blew it!
LeFantome
in reply to Hule • • •LandedGentry
in reply to phantomwise • • •asdfasfasfsadf
:::
LeFantome
in reply to phantomwise • • •Sims
in reply to phantomwise • • •I slept in my first computer - and worked as verbal RAM (first VRAM!) 28 hours a day !
"..and when you tell this to young people today, they won't believe you !" - Monty Python.
phantomwise
in reply to Sims • • •AnUnusualRelic
in reply to merci3 • • •pastermil
in reply to merci3 • • •Lmao, I've ran Linux on an eeePC with 1GB RAM and 900MHz Intel Atom. Compiling gcc & glibc could take hours.
Edit: RPi3 still got only 1GB, BeagleBone Black even got 512MB, don't forget RPi0
badbytes
in reply to merci3 • • •piranhaconda
in reply to merci3 • • •My 2011 MacBook pro is still chugging along thanks to Linux.
I upgraded 4GB RAM to 16GB, upgraded the HDD to SSD, and replaced the CD drive with a second SSD. Sadly the screen is almost completely gone, occasionally intermittent, probably a cable gone bad, not sure, but the mini display port is working fine for an external monitor.
BarrelAgedBoredom
in reply to piranhaconda • • •Dariusmiles2123
in reply to piranhaconda • • •My girlfriend’s 2012 MacBook Pro is also running Fedora like a beast with its upgraded 16GB or Ram and its SSD.
It’s great that old hardware gets a bew chance to shine!
LeFantome
in reply to Dariusmiles2123 • • •I found my people.
I have Linux on a 2009 and 2012 MacBook Pro and 2013 and 2017 MacBook Airs.
The 2009 is getting a bit sluggish but for regular stuff, they all work great. We even played a Steam game on the 2012 earlier today (not AAA obviously).
All Chimera Linux.
UncleSlacky
in reply to LeFantome • • •misterbzr
in reply to merci3 • • •like this
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merci3
in reply to misterbzr • • •like this
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misterbzr
in reply to merci3 • • •like this
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cmnybo
in reply to merci3 • • •like this
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HaraldvonBlauzahn
in reply to cmnybo • • •Slowest thing I have tried to work on was a 386. But this one was slow - compiling the kernel took an eternity.
LeFantome
in reply to cmnybo • • •You would be surprised. If you stay text only and use a 32 bit distro, it would run up to date versions of most CLI programs.
Adelie and Arch32 still support Pentium.
Booting to a GUI, there are still a few options. I think Velox would run on that. I bet Xorg with FVWM would too. You are not going to have much left for apps though. However, you could run a couple of terminals.
Adelie Linux (totally modern Linux distro) lists 64 MB as the minimum server memory requirement.
cmnybo
in reply to LeFantome • • •I ran Damn Small Linux on it about 15 years ago. That worked pretty well and it would even run a web browser. It would probably boot Tiny Core Linux, but there wouldn't be much RAM left to run any programs. The motherboard supports 128MB, but it's not really worth the cost to upgrade it though.
I may see about resurrecting that computer. I've got an old Motorola police radio that I would like to reprogram to operate in the 2M ham band and I think that PC will run the programming software.
phantomwise
in reply to merci3 • • •twinnie
in reply to merci3 • • •like this
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merci3
in reply to twinnie • • •Yeah, yeah, many people used to run 512mb ram and 500mhz cpu setups.. But that was in 2000 and whatever.
madnificent
in reply to merci3 • • •merci3
in reply to madnificent • • •That was the lowest for me, I really don't get the confusion. And even then, a celeron m 380 was lower end even for it's own time
merci3
in reply to twinnie • • •Yeah, yeah, many people used to run 512mb ram and 500mhz cpu setups.. But that was in 2000 and whatever.
catloaf
in reply to merci3 • • •like this
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ThunderLegend
in reply to merci3 • • •Eugenia
in reply to merci3 • • •LeFantome
in reply to Eugenia • • •It is because it is 32 bit. You can run a 32 bit distro on your machine too if you really want.
You can get a full Trinity desktop on Q4OS in 130 MB of RAM (32 bit edition).
Eugenia
in reply to LeFantome • • •LeFantome
in reply to Eugenia • • •Are you running Trinity or KDE?
Not sure why I get so much less unless it is that. Or are you saying you run Trinity 64 bit?
I agree that 32 bit is not often going to be 50% less in practice. Sometimes I think we should be running 64 bit kernels with 32 bit userland.
Eugenia
in reply to LeFantome • • •hexagonwin
in reply to Eugenia • • •Eugenia
in reply to hexagonwin • • •Jestzer
in reply to merci3 • • •corsicanguppy
in reply to merci3 • • •Are we competing again?
I'm proud to be setting up a rhel10 desktop, as it'll be the first time I ran Linux as a desktop in 30 years of a Linux/Unix career.
To rephrase: I ran XFree86 on a 4mb i386 machine 30 years ago.
What do I win?
merci3
in reply to corsicanguppy • • •ѕєχυαℓ ρσℓутσρє
in reply to merci3 • • •suswrkr
in reply to merci3 • • •not_amm
in reply to suswrkr • • •suswrkr
in reply to not_amm • • •Lenovo ThinkCentre M715q, Lenovo ThinkCentre M93p
separate cheap newer N100 cpu node for jellyfin, other encoding
Intel NUC NUC8i5BEHS for k3s control plane, little more expensive but reliable.
i usually replace Thinkcentre fans w noctua for power draw, performance, and noise. and remove wifi module, not needed, draws power, closed blob firmware, is a risk. pops out easy, no config changes needed in Debian.
not_amm
in reply to suswrkr • • •merci3
in reply to suswrkr • • •kalpol
in reply to merci3 • • •Lettuce eat lettuce
in reply to merci3 • • •Hell yeah! Love seeing old hardware like this still running a modern OS.
With Linux, if your hardware is a decade old, you've barely even reached middle-age.
Meanwhile Windows 11 won't even allow an official install on hardware that's 4-5 years old.
Long live Linux & FOSS ✊
LoudWaterHombre
in reply to merci3 • • •Dave
in reply to LoudWaterHombre • • •LoudWaterHombre
in reply to Dave • • •Thanks for suggesting DietPi! I never heard of it but it sounds just like what my ZeroW needs
(Also runs PiHole)
Dave
in reply to LoudWaterHombre • • •No problem! I've used it for years, though my home assistant running on a Raspberry Pi 4 is now doing the pi-hole thing with adguard instead as the original one was having issues. Though you get weird DNS quirks when the machine running DNS also relies on the internet.
Plus that time I did a dumb thing in home assistant to see what would happen, and it brought the internet down.
So I am keen to get another Pi. I highly recommend keeping it on a dedicated device you never touch except for updates!
rustydrd
in reply to merci3 • • •Ptsf
in reply to merci3 • • •merci3
in reply to Ptsf • • •squaresinger
in reply to merci3 • • •I got you beat with my HP Mini running a 32-bit Intel Atom N270 that I use to develop games for the open source physiotherapy gamification device I made for my kid when I'm on the train.
Don't want to carry my full-size gaming laptop to work just to do some light lua coding.
answersplease77
in reply to merci3 • • •thats my current laptop
Edit: im exagerating but I really have 20-yr 32-bit Dell laptops running minimal debian linux. and my current laptop is 10+ yrs old Lenovo which I already replaced its screen, rams, keyboard, bluetooth, usb ports... and it's still working flawlessly for daily tasks, video/music editing, coding and programming, internet browsing 😁
Lawnman23
in reply to answersplease77 • • •data1701d (He/Him)
in reply to merci3 • • •BartyDeCanter
in reply to merci3 • • •Manifish_Destiny
in reply to merci3 • • •Shark Jack
Hak5cy_narrator
in reply to merci3 • • •cy_narrator
in reply to merci3 • • •merci3
in reply to cy_narrator • • •kurcatovium
in reply to merci3 • • •rumba
in reply to merci3 • • •Aceticon
in reply to rumba • • •Similar story but I just installed slackware on one of the University PCs (they just had a handful of PCs in the general computer room for the students and nobody actually watched over us) since I did not have a PC yet (only had a ZX Spectrum at the timback then).
Trying to get X-Windows to work in Slackware was interesting, to say the least: back then you had to manually create your own video timings configuration file to get the graphics to work - which means defining the video mode at the very low level, such as configuring the number of video clock cycles between end-of-line-drawing and horizontal-retrace - and fortunatelly I didn't actually blow up any monitor (which was possible if you did the configuration wrong).
At least we had some access to the Internet (most things were blocked but we had Usenet and e-email and one could use FTPmail gateways to download stuff from remote servers) via Ethernet, so that part was easy.
Anyways, my first reaction looking at the OP's post was like: yeah, if they're running X it's probably a too powerfull machine.
rumba
in reply to Aceticon • • •My favorite part of the first configuration of x back then, you screw with the conf for ages, manage to get a viable video mode set, startx for the billionth time... gray screen, mouse cursor... Overflowingly happy... Wait, now what? No program manager, no apps, no terminal, No exit, no shutdown. What's a window manager? The least apparent thing in the world being to switch consoles , export a display variable, and start an xtern in the video console.
We worked so hard for every little thing.
Aceticon
in reply to rumba • • •Yeah, but at least we knew how to switch consoles.
I bet that most Linux users nowadays don't event know the CTRL+ALT+Fx shortcuts to switch console.
Can't say that the old days were really "good" compared to what we had now, but there was definitelly a lot of satisfaction in step by step getting the system to work.
rumba
in reply to Aceticon • • •MangoCats
in reply to rumba • • •I got my modem working in Slackware in 1997 - but the PPP driver (equivalent of WinSock - which worked in Windows quite well at the time) would only work during the first boot of the system. After a reboot, PPP would never return, and the best I got out of the internet about it at the time (mostly using my Windows PC) was "real men connect to the internet through ethernet."
Between that an the useless (unless you enjoy frustration) sound drivers, I declared Linux "not ready for prime time," and left it to others until starting back in via Cygwin in 2003, then Gentoo (for 64 bit access you couldn't get any other way) in 2005.
rumba
in reply to MangoCats • • •MangoCats
in reply to rumba • • •zquestz
in reply to merci3 • • •MangoCats
in reply to zquestz • • •Aceticon
in reply to merci3 • • •Stories from the "good" old days running Linux on a 386 machine with 4 MB or less of memory aside, in the present day it's still perfectly normal to run Linux on a much weaker machine as a server - you can just rent a the cheapest VPS you can find (which nowadays will have 128 MB, maybe 256MB, and definitelly only give you a single core) and install it there.
Of course, it won't be something with X-Windows or Wayland, much less stuff like LibreOffice.
I think the server distribution of Ubunto might fit such a VPS, though there are server-specific Linux distros that will for sure fit and if everything fails TinyCore Linux will fit in a potato.
I current have a server like that using AlmaLinux on a VPS with less than 1GB in memory, which is used only as a Git repository and that machine is overkill for it (it's the lowest end VPS with enough storage space for a Git repository big enough for the projects I'm working on, so judging by the server management interface and linux meminfo, that machine's CPU power and memory are in practice far more than needed).
If you're willing to live with a command line interface, you can run Linux on $50 worth of hardware.
vvvvv
in reply to Aceticon • • •And boy would that core be shitty and over-provisioned.
EchoSnail
in reply to merci3 • • •Blue_Morpho
in reply to merci3 • • •Jerkface (any/all)
in reply to merci3 • • •zorflieg
in reply to merci3 • • •Mwa
in reply to zorflieg • • •Mwa
in reply to merci3 • • •merci3
in reply to Mwa • • •Mwa
in reply to merci3 • • •merci3
in reply to Mwa • • •Mwa
in reply to merci3 • • •drathvedro
in reply to merci3 • • •vfreire85
in reply to merci3 • • •merci3
in reply to vfreire85 • • •medem
in reply to merci3 • • •jj4211
in reply to merci3 • • •I remember back in the day when I downloaded the first divx file my K6-400 couldn't smoothly play... I had been so used to thinking of that as a powerhouse coming from my Pentium 60, which was the first one I ran Linux on.
Ensign_Crab
in reply to merci3 • • •LeFantome
in reply to merci3 • • •Arthur Besse
in reply to merci3 • • •I think it was born in the 21st century? From this it looks like the first Celeron M was in 2004, and the first at that clockspeed was 2005.
Also, 2GB of RAM is plenty for many purposes - that's more than any Raspberry Pi before the Pi 4 had!
Wikimedia list article
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)merci3
in reply to Arthur Besse • • •Actually.. You're right about the 21st century lmao. I just wanted an excuse to quote Metal Gear Solid
Also, the issue is not ram itself, of course, 2GB is enough for lots of fun on Linux, it's the CPU that's killing me
4shtonButcher
in reply to merci3 • • •Count Regal Inkwell
in reply to merci3 • • •points Brazilian