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2 yr. ago

  • You'll need to specify what DE you're using. This comes built in with KDE Plasma: Meta+left and then quickly also up for top left corner, Meta+right and then quickly also down for bottom right corner etc.

    I don't knowt what exact shortcuts other DEs use, but I think most that aren't Gnome support quarter tiling too

  • Debian still ships version 5

    Debian ships 5.27.5 - it's not just not updating often, but it's not shipping bugfix releases (latest 5.27 version is 5.27.11!). I recommend to avoid it and maybe look at KUbuntu LTS instead

  • I was especially surprised to find that Gnome would turn the screen around correctly by itself. With KDE Plasma I had to set the correct screen orientation myself. And unfortunately Plasma also did not come with any on screen keyboard so it was effectively unusable.

    You just need to use a distro that follows our upstream defaults - namely Wayland, and having the virtual keyboard Maliit installed by default - then everything will work out of the box with KDE Plasma too.

  • 4k is literally a resolution, usually 3840x2160 or something around that. 1080p is another resolution, usually 1920x1080. These are never comparable.

    You would be right if lossy compression wasn't a thing. But it is, and it's getting used a lot.

    "4k" can very much be worse than 1080p if it's compressed in a way that erases more details. That's what people are complaining about with streaming services and YouTube - the resolution numbers don't mean shit, and quality at a given "resolution" has been degraded more and more over time.

  • Widgets aren't themes. They're things on your desktop that people are using for example for showing a folder - and if that can't interact with the system, that widget's functionality is broken.

    Of course, that should not apply to install scripts or the like, which shouldn't be a thing at all really. And it should be made a lot more obvious which downloadable things can execute code / which ones are "guaranteed" safe and which ones may not be.

  • No, it's just a (long fixed!) bug. In the case of the Deck, the next version of SteamOS comes with the fix soon... in the case of Debian, they don't ship our bugfix releases, so it'll be stuck with this until Debian 13 :/

  • Gnome defaulted to Wayland when it was still very much unusable to be frank, it doesn't really have any relevance for removing the Xorg session.

    I think Fedora 38 is when they defaulted to wayland in the Plasma edition

    34, not 38.

  • Is that on Xorg, or on Wayland? On Xorg, a bunch of different processes can try to take control over the gamma_lut of a screen (like night light in KWin vs the gamma settings page vs some games like CS2 vs colord), so if you're on Xorg I'd be surprised if you didn't have issues with it sooner...

  • It is closed in the sense that all the ISO specs are closed - you have to pay a decent sum of money to see the specs, and you're not allowed to just copy them and show them to people that haven't bought access.

    They are not closed like HDMI though - if you implement them, copy constants from the specs into the Linux kernel for example, that's fine. Having actually open standards like Wayland would be a lot better though ofc...

  • Yes, it is a KDE shortcut, a kwin_x11 shortcut to be more specific. It's not a thing with kwin_wayland, and so it most certainly did not help or do anything for you - unless you're not actually using the Wayland session of course.