Apple isn't private, Mastodon loses users, Mozilla joins the fediverse - podcast episode cover

Apple isn't private, Mastodon loses users, Mozilla joins the fediverse

Jan 14, 2023β€’47 minβ€’Season 1Ep. 2
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Timestamps and links:

00:00 Intro

01:39 Apple fined for violating their user’s privacy

https://gizmodo.com/apple-iphone-france-ads-fine-illegal-data-1849950163

https://www.reuters.com/technology/apple-fined-1-mln-euros-by-paris-commercial-court-over-app-store-practices-2022-12-19/

https://gizmodo.com/apple-iphone-analytics-tracking-even-when-off-app-store-1849757558

06:42 Google settles yet another privacy violation

https://www.androidcentral.com/apps-software/google-23-million-dollar-search-privacy-settlement

09:51 Newly arrived Mastodon users aren’t all sticking around

https://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2023/jan/08/elon-musk-drove-more-than-a-million-people-to-mastodon-but-many-arent-sticking-around

14:57 Mozilla joins the fediverse

https://blog.mozilla.org/en/mozilla/mozilla-launch-fediverse-instance-social-media-alternative/

18:11 New full AMD laptop being announced by System76

https://system76.com/laptops/pangolin-teaser

21:40 GNOME lets you test a new UI change with an extension

https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2023/01/try-gnome-44-focus-indicator-animation

27:01 GNOME weekly updates

https://thisweek.gnome.org/posts/2023/01/twig-77/

30:06 UnityX brings customization to Unity DE

https://unityd.org/unityx-7-7-testing/

33:59 KDE Weekly updates

https://pointieststick.com/2023/01/06/this-week-in-kde-big-ui-improvements/

36:35 PopOS makes performance better for potato computers

https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2023/01/pop_os_zram-update

39:42 Chromium now scrolls correctly on Linux

https://linuxiac.com/chromium-109-update-brings-faster-scrolling-to-linux-users/

41:08 Gaming News: FOSS Nvidia driver, Dolphin emulator gets better

https://github.com/ValveSoftware/Proton/wiki/Changelog

https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2023/01/gamecube-and-wii-emulator-dolphin-got-a-big-speed-boost-for-steam-deck/

https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2023/01/the-open-source-nvidia-vulkan-driver-nvk-begins-to-run-games/

45:40 Outro

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Transcript

Hey everyone, this is Nick and welcome to this new episode of your Linux and open source news podcast And as always well, I say always it's just the second episode But still it's a longer version of your usual linux and open source news videos that I make on youtube But just with more topics more details and without my ugly mug in it They also tend to be more rambling So this week our main topics are apple being fined for violating users privacy in the eu

By not obtaining consent from them before harvesting their data We have mastodon losing active users after its insane growth period With some users just not sticking around after making the transition from twitter And we have mozilla joining the fediverse with their own mastodon instance But we also have news about gnome kde and unity for desktop environments We have updates to pop os improving performance for everyone

And we have a lot more stuff including an open source nvidia gpu driver making good progress Now just quickly before we begin this podcast is brought to you free of ads free of sponsors And the plan is for it to remain this way So if you like it, don't hesitate to check out the patreon page in the show notes or to visit the paypal link To donate whatever you want all the links to the articles that I used to make that podcast are in the show notes as well

And you can find all my socials on the podcast website, which is podcast.thelinuxexp.com Where you can also comment on the episodes to discuss a specific topic or to leave some feedback okay, so we're going to be starting with apple and Apple if you know is really hitting the privacy stuff really hard like they're saying What happens on your phone stays on what happens on your iphone stays on your iphone?

They pride themselves on not transferring data here and there they run their ai models locally, whatever blah blah That's their big campaign promise when you buy an iphone It's supposedly more private now as we all probably know there's been plenty of studies that show that basically IPhones emits the exact same amount of data per day Than an android phone except they send it mostly to apple instead of sending it to google And apple has a way smaller ad network than google

So they probably use less of it to target you but they still use some of it to target you And if you're in the governments can access my data camp Then you know that basically every single shred of data that goes into their servers is accessed by the various governments where it is stored But now there's definite proof that apple is actually lying on their privacy claims

Because the french CNIL which is the data commission for france basically it stands for commission nationale de l'informatique et des libertΓ©s Which roughly translates in national commission for computer science and freedoms

They just find apple for 8 million euros. So that's that's a very small amount of money Obviously, it's not much but it's still a condemnation of the company's bad privacy practice And the condemnation is for The fact that apple was found to illegally harvest user data So they could target them with ads in the app store without gathering a user's consent But they they just didn't ask people if they consented to being targeted with ads on the app store

So they basically deposited and wrote identifiers that were used for advertising purposes on the phones And they never asked users if they wanted to which is Not exactly the case because when you have an iphone or an ios device in the settings you can tell ios to not Uh track you to not track you with targeted ads and apple will even on third-party apps every time the application Asks to have access to your unique id

That lets you that lets the application the developer of the app identify you and track you and serve you targeted ads Every time a third-party application tries to access this Apple will show a pop-up saying this application wants to track you. Do you agree or not?

Everybody's gonna say no, but they never show that for their own apps and the setting that you can turn on doesn't apply to their Own applications, which is exactly why they're being condemned right now They're basically just lying that you turn on a setting but they don't follow it for their own application

Because it's not third-party data. It's first-party data. It's data from a direct consumer of apple Now, of course, they are going to appeal that decision Obviously, uh because they say they prioritize user privacy They say that they do more in terms of user privacy than anybody else to provide users with a clear choice for personalized ads and Of course, like I said that choice is just yes, it exists But it's not applied to apple's own apps, which like it's it's not great

And it compounds with the fact that apple was already fined Was already fined another 1 million euros in december for imposing abusive commercial clauses on french app Developers that that was a fine that was doled out in france as well Because well, basically the clauses that apple enforces on their app store when people sign up To to publish their app on the app store. They're just illegal

Basically, they are abusive. They sway the relationship in favor of apple way too much and make developers way too dependent So if you add that to the fact that they're going to have to enable third-party app stores in the eu They're really not starting to look like a very good option right now Or at least their marketing claims are being debunked And yeah, of course like they can say that they track people less than everybody else but like if the bar is zero because everybody else like

Like on the phone everybody else tracks users you have android which is basically the biggest spyware you can have Or you have iphones and yes IPhones do probably track a little bit less data than what google can because google has more services that that are basically enforced When you use android but yeah, just just because you do it less doesn't mean much right?

It's it's still crappy and it's a bad moment for me because I literally just switched to an iphone like a few months ago and I just made a video about it which angered a lot of people for some reason because apparently you Are not allowed to like stuff that people don't but hey Here we are Now still we have another privacy breach, but this time from google which has been settled for 23 million dollars This was initiated by a very old lawsuit opened in california in 2010

That google already had tried to settle for 8.5 million dollars in 2013 But that settlement fell through because while they were trying to settle it there were other convictions that were that were basically against google google was convicted of doing other things that Basically made the thing they were accused of in this 2010 lawsuit a lot more likely to have actually happened And so they managed to drag this through the courts for almost 10 more years

But they finally settled it for well 23 million dollars, which is virtually nothing for google But still it like a settlement isn't an admission of guilt But it's pretty much an admission of guilt basically if a company agrees to pay that kind of money it's not just to stop a lawsuit it's because they know they did something wrong and they just They don't want to pay lawyers to keep dragging it along again and again

So this suit uh still needs court approval this settlement the court still need to say yes Okay, we agree that google can pay that amount of money to get the charges dropped and they This suit is about the fact that google shared well allegedly shared search terms that consumers had typed in the search engine With advertisers and third-party vendors without any permission and without any consent from the users That happened on the web that happened on search bar on android

And also when the user clicked on any link sponsored or not on google the personal information of the user Was also apparently disclosed to said third parties which had paid google to have access to that data But google was not allowed to give that data away Now that lawsuit also alleges that these third parties also paid google to have more information About which search related factors led the user to actually click on a specific link

So not only did they pay to have the personal information, but they also paid to know what you did before Which let them infer How they can influence you basically you're paying to know okay this guy He's this kind of age He likes this kind of stuff and he clicked on this link And why did he click on this link because he visited this first and this first and this first so you can now deduce his

Behavior about the behavior of the user and you can now really easily influence its decision through dark patterns for example So basically all of this means that google would have violated the stored communications act, which is a u.s federal law And so they basically decided to settle it So yes, it's all alleged behavior. It has they have not been condemned They have not been found guilty. But if they agreed to settle that case after what?

20 no Yeah, 12 years after 12 12 almost 13 years if they accepted to settle that after 13 years for 23 million It's probably because they knew they were guilty and like it was an easy escape door, basically now let's talk a little bit about the Fediverse and

Well, you probably already know about mastodon. You know that mastodon has seen insane growth recently They passed 6.5 million accounts user accounts and there they were at some point at about 2.5 million monthly active users in early december Most of this growth came after elon musk bought twitter whether you think they fled twitter for a good reason or not

I don't care. That's not my point in here But basically that's the main cause like you can clearly see on graphs a direct correlation between every single announcement of elon musk about what he wants to do with the platform and a

Immediate direct increase in the number of mastodon users whether they're here for good reason or not. I'll let you decide that I personally think that yes, but that's just my opinion And it seems like these users are not necessarily sticking around on mastodon The number of active mastodon users declined by about 30 percent between december and january Uh, it moved from 2.5 million in early december to 1.8 or 1.9 million active users monthly active users in early january

Which seems like a lot like it's basically 600 000 people which is More than the number of active users mastodon even had before the twitter acquisition So it's a lot of people that just decided that mastodon wasn't for them

Now, of course, there are multiple possible explanations. The first one is you're measuring active usage During the month of december which as we all know is holiday season for a lot of people They're with their families and of course the engagement is going to be a lot lower So this might have an impact on the number of people But that cannot account for all of that and I don't have the exact definition of what they count as a monthly active user if you need to at least use

Mastodon once to interact with one post or even just get logged in Once in the month or if it's more than that if it's once a month Then no the holidays cannot excuse that I can't believe that someone during the whole month of december that actually likes mastodon would never Log back in for a whole month, but you never know

I don't have the exact definition. So it could be more contentious than that But it's still a lot of of a decrease, but Honestly, it's not that surprising in my opinion because Well, obviously you're leaving a specific platform not because you hate the platform But because you don't like what it's becoming Or because everybody's talking about the new thing and you want to try the new thing

Or because your friends are pressuring you to moving there or because you just want to experiment with something new And of course all of this generates a lot of new signups a lot of new logins But that doesn't mean that every single person will find what they want on mastodon Some people might just have thought that they couldn't find the people they actually wanted to follow and they moved back

Some people might have been really angry at at what twitter was announcing and then realized that you know What it still kind of works for me and went back there And went back there There's been a few arguments There have been a few arguments online saying that it's because mastodon is too difficult and that people left

But the difficulty is only into finding a server an instance and signing up afterwards. It's not difficult So I don't think that's it because then the numbers would not have gone up people would just not have been able to sign up But what we're seeing is people who actually signed up and used to log in don't log in anymore So it's probably not because of the instance thing Unless like they could never actually get to grips with mastodon itself

But that would be weird because it's basically an exact replica of twitter in terms of user interface So I think it's normal. I don't think it's anything to worry about for now If the numbers continue to decrease again and again and again month after month, then yes, it's going to be an issue but For now, there's the december factor. There's the normal fact that people trying out new things for two or three months will

Some of them will drop out. It's normal. It's absolutely normal. It's not concerning in the slightest. We'll have to wait and see how long this decline lasts if

February and march also keep declining at the same rate. Then yes, there's a very big problem That means that basically the platform is somehow unusable for most people who just signed up But if it's just a momentarily decrease and it shuts back up Which is very probable seeing that twitter just announced that they were going to test out a feed that is basically just an algorithm

So some kind of tiktok like feed which surfaces things that it thinks you might like instead of surfacing the tweets from people you actually follow This might drive more people to mastodon again, and they might drop out again afterwards We're gonna have to see i'm personally not really that concerned but hey you do you now still on the fattyverse This is something that I missed at the end of 2022 I don't know how because it's supposed to be in the articles and blogs that I follow

But it looks like mozilla is entering the fattyverse too They'll be testing a publicly accessible instance, which is going to be mozilla.social

Which is going to be a mastodon instance and they'll be testing it in early 2023. So it cannot be far From now, I guess in a few months tops and yeah, so it's it's only a mastodon instance for for now They say they're gonna start their fattyverse exploration with mastodon And so I guess you can infer that maybe if it goes well, they'll open instances for other things Maybe peer2, pixelfed, castopod, whatever else

This initiative seems to be part of their pledge for a healthier internet, a healthy internet as they call it uh, which is basically their way of saying we'd like the internet to remain open and nice and people to not act like bastards towards each other and so they decided that moving away from the traditional social media or at least Bringing their support to to less traditional social media like mastodon to the fattyverse basically

They feel that bringing them their support to that is is a way of helping and I honestly agree They're joining Vivaldi into supporting the fattyverse as well because Vivaldi also opened their own mastodon instance And honestly, I'm all for it If you don't like these companies or non-profits and you don't want to support them Then you can not use their instances or block people that come from these instances if they annoy you

But the fact remains that these big names are big endorsements for such a new well Or newly talked about social network such as mastodon or a relatively new concept like the fattyverse and decentralized social media They're a big endorsement and when people see big names like Mozilla or Vivaldi Maybe they think that it's more trustworthy

Maybe they feel more at ease picking these servers over servers that might be managed by people. They don't know about It reinforces trust basically, so I think it's a good thing I don't think these companies specifically Vivaldi or Mozilla will turn the fattyverse into a corporate nightmare Like some people seem to think They're basically insignificant in terms of their impact and contribution They're not offensive companies by any means

And they're not big enough to sway the whole number of users. They just bring some big name backing To a service that is I think a good thing. So we'll have to see if other companies follow suit though I think it was

How is it called Flickr? I think it was Flickr that also wanted to join the fattyverse, which is kind of cool and we'll see how it goes and if people do it or not, but I think it's good to have that kind of backing and It will bring more attention to mastodon But it will probably also bring more attention to various fattyverse services like PixelFed, like Castopod, like Peertube and that can only be a good thing

Okay. Now a really small thing. We talked about AMD desktops last week, full AMD computers And now we have a full AMD laptop being announced by System76. It's their refresh of the Pangolin which is Sort of their workstation laptop

It seems to have a new chassis, which is magnesium alloy. It's 15.6 inches and it is Using an AMD CPU and a dedicated AMD GPU as well So from what we've seen is just a press release and an announcement right now They have a teaser page with a few specs, but we don't know all the configurations that are possible We don't know the release date yet But from what they've already talked about and announced it seems like it's gonna have a full HD

144 hertz display. It's gonna use a Ryzen 7 6800U, which is a pretty good CPU And it's going to be coupled with a Radeon 680M GPU, which is

Not a power workhorse, basically. It's about on par with a GDX 1050 Ti Which means it's probably going to be more than enough for some professional workflows like small 3D modeling, video editing 3D whatever work, modeling, I already said that, CAD work or Basically these kind of activities like digital painting or or stuff like using GIMP It's going to accelerate those tasks really well, but for gaming that's just not going to be enough at least for modern gaming

And yeah, you're not going to use that as a full powered workstation desktop replacement Still, they managed to bring 10 hours of battery life, they say at least, 10 hours of battery life instead of the 6 hours of the previous Pangolin model, which is in my opinion really nice for something with a dedicated GPU It is kind of chunky at 1.8 kilograms It has a 70 watt-hour battery and you got the usual two slots for M.2 SSDs It apparently supports up to 16 terabytes of RAM

You get DDR5 RAM, you get a good enough port selection with regular USB, USB-C, HDMI, Ethernet Headphone jacks, of course, you get the usual potato 720p webcam, which is, I know it, it's going to be underwhelming And that's about all we know for the time being, we don't have a release date We don't have the various configurations We don't know if you have the option to have a better display than just full HD I know some people on 15 inches really would prefer 1440p or even 4k

We'll have to see. Technically this laptop, I should get a review unit I rarely, no, I never got a System76 device because I live in Europe and they are in the US And they don't generally ship where I live, they ship their laptops, but it's kind of expensive Apparently this time I'm getting a review unit I've been talking with System76 a little bit more these days ever since I reviewed their keyboards And it seems that they're willing to send me some stuff, which is cool

So technically once the Pangolin is out, I should be able to have a video review of it, which is nice It's going to be my first System76 laptop that I can review So you can look at the YouTube channel for that because yes, this podcast is something But my main activity is the YouTube channel called the Linux experiment Some of you might know it, some of you apparently don't because someone on Patreon just subscribed exclusively for the podcast, apparently

So yeah, if you want to see video reviews, of course, there's a YouTube channel called the Linux experiment Now let's move on to some desktop environments We're going to start with GNOME And if you thought that they never listened to their users or they did whatever they wanted Well, they have this new initiative that might be of interest They're basically thinking about making a change on the current GNOME desktop But instead of just deciding on their own or with their own design team

They decided to let users test that change and give some feedback by releasing an extension that you can install on GNOME 43 And use it and just give your feedback on how you like it or how you don't like it

So the change that they're planning is the little application name menu. They want to remove it basically And yes, I know it's yet another thing that GNOME is removing If you use GNOME, you know that there's the activities button in the top left corner of the top panel And next to it is the name of the application that you're currently running and clicking on that generally doesn't have many options You can show the details of the app in the app store in GNOME software

You can shut down the application and you sometimes get the same options as in the jump lists that the application might have So for example, the options that you could get by right clicking on the applications icon in a dock So for example a new window for firefox or a new window for a file manager stuff like that So they're planning to maybe remove. Well, they're testing the waters on removing this menu The rationale is

This menu used to be more useful. It used to contain everything that is in the hamburger menu of the application

Well what used to be the hamburger menu of GNOME apps. This menu has been deprecated since I don't know 6 or 10 versions and is not used in in GNOME applications anymore They do have a hamburger menu, but they don't have the application menu that they used to have So this menu in the top panel doesn't really have much of interest That you cannot already replicate either through the hamburger menu of the application a keyboard shortcut Or the bottom dock that you can get in the activities view

The second thing that this app App app name menu. Let's call it this app name menu was doing Is as a focus indicator basically by looking at it, you knew which window was focused So for example if I have right now like right now i've got my firefox window with my next cloud note For my podcast notes. I have my audacity window I'm using dark mode, which means that both windows are pretty dark at a glance

I don't exactly know which one is focused if I look up. I know that audacity is Focused Now you could also argue that this is a problem with the theme That gnome is using that applications in focus are not distinct enough and I would agree

Whether it's in light mode or dark mode. I think the application that is in focus isn't super well Focused basically using the theme The non-focused windows aren't dark enough in my opinion, but that's another topic So basically they're saying this menu was supposed to do that But since it's tucked into the top left corner, it's not immediately visible And they they think they can do better to show which application is focused, especially when you change

Windows and so what they're proposing is that you install the the extension I think it's called

I have the name right there. It's called focus indicator And this new extension will basically remove that app name menu and give you an animation when you switch windows So if you press alt tab, for example, the window that is newly focused will have some kind of little rebound effect It's going to grow bigger and smaller once or twice just to show you that yeah, it's vibrating a little bit This is the one that you're currently using I haven't tested it yet

So I don't know if that animation is also reflected when you click on a window and not just when you use keyboard shortcuts But I would expect it to be so it's clearer to know which window is currently focused And so basically you can try it out and test it and give your feedback

The extension lets you adjust a few things. It lets you tweak the animation parameters Of what the window does when it's focused, but that doesn't mean that these settings will make it into the final implementation What it just means is that you have a way to test this change before it's applied in gnome 44 And say that you absolutely hate it if you do or that you absolutely like it if you do

I will say that you don't care in that case. You probably just have to not send any feedback Personally, I would rather have that app name menu be actually useful like maybe containing Everything that is in the in the hamburger menu Or maybe being the content of the menu bar of older applications For example audacity is a gtk2 app I think and it still uses an old menu bar I would rather have that menu bar get out of the window and be tucked into the app name menu

Instead of having no app name menu and that menu bar in the middle of my window Or the contents of the hamburger menu could be duplicated in that app name menu But since they seem to think that this menu doesn't serve any purpose They might as well remove it I guess and give us a good animation Right now I never clicked on it to interact with a window ever since I started using gnome on fedora And I don't really see why you would do that

Now still on gnome topics, there are a few nice updates to their applications this week So there's that extension that I talked about. There's also a new version of tangram, which is written t-a-n-g-r-a-m g-r-a-m Sorry, it's a web-based A web app based browser that lets you access a bunch of pinned web apps So basically instead of having all your web apps in your main web browser window in normal tabs It gives you a sidebar with a list of pinned web apps that are all accessed in the same window

It's basically a secondary web browser designed to run web apps and it looks kind of cool Especially if you interact with a lot of people with various communication tools It's going to let you have all of them at the same time in the same place

It's pretty cool. And so this new release uses a newer webkit engine because as with all like gnome applications They tend to use a webkit in their browser Components and it also updates the gnome runtime and there's also a beta for tangram 2.0 Which will be moving to libadvita and gtk4 Now there is also a new application called carburetor written c-a-r-b-u-r-e-t-o-r

T-o-r-r, which is designed to connect to the tor network. So I guess it's pronounced carburetor It's mainly meant for linux phones, but I don't see any reason why it shouldn't work on desktops as well There's also a new version of graphs, which is a math data and plotting a statistics data and plotting application It has a new update and it basically lets you get the integral or the derivative of your data And it lets you perform fournier transforms. Now my math classes are so far away now

that I cannot even remember how you would do that manually. I used to be able to do it because I just I had my main exam with a math specialty So I was able to do pretty crazy stuff at the time, but I forgot all about it So I guess if you're like me, that's a very useful tool to have Now you also have a new version of money, a new beta of money, which is the personal finance manager Which lets you create repeat transactions

So you can say I've got this recurring cost every two weeks or every month And so you don't have to re-enter it manually or every month or duplicate transactions, which is better And it also has some design tweaks And more importantly gnome developers have fixed an issue in the desktop portals Which will let applications use the document portal to let users choose where to save documents There was a bug previously in there that opened the files in read only

When you were using the the desktop portal with the document portal in a file picker So this meant that you could open files, but you couldn't save them using that file picker which Obviously sucks because it's more secure to use that portal than not So now it's fixed and so it should be all better and so applications should also be moving to the document portal for save operations and now we're going to talk about unity as a desktop environment and

You probably already know or at least I talked about it Maybe in the last podcast or or two linux news videos previously I talked about unity 7.7, which is going to be like the next major update It brings a few redesigns, a few improvements Well, apparently they're also working on something else, which is a variant of unity 7.7 But it's going to be called unity x so you're going to have unity 7.7 Which is the mainline release and you're going to have unity x 7.7, which brings a bunch of changes

It's basically the exact same desktop as the current unity But it's going to let you customize it and and use it with more modularity So you can replace the window manager with anything you want including something that supports Wayland For example, you could replace or remove the top panel that contains the indicators the global menu and stuff like that And you could also tweak a lot more things In the settings than what unity currently lets you do

So basically unity x is the exact same thing as unity, but letting you mix and match components which begs the question. Why?

Why would you keep working on the standard non-customizable unity 7.7 When you have work on a much more modular unity x 7.7, which is already possible to test If you go on gitlab on the gitlab project of unity, you can already download it and try it out I don't really understand why you would keep working on the older project if the new one has feature parity, but is also More advanced and has more modularity and features, but I guess they must have a reason behind that

So basically in terms of features You still have the same dash as you used to which is the thing that lets you search for files applications And and videos and stuff like that on your hard drive And it still works as you would expect But now you can adjust the opacity of it something that you could not do in regular unity 7 You still have the HUD which is that that heads-up display interface that lets you search through menu bar items

You just type the command you want and if the HUD finds something in the menu bar of the application It surfaces it and if you press enter it actually launches that command which is pretty cool

And so this thing is being completely redesigned. It's not part of the dash anymore. It's a floating window It apparently supports way more applications than the regular unity HUD which had issues with applications that were basically non-gtk And or which did not expose their menu bar to the top panel And it can also be opened on multiple apps at the same time, which is pretty cool And you also get the same control center as unity, but it has more options to change more settings

And there's also a new yaml file that you can edit To replace the window manager to change some settings to replace the settings daemon to replace the panel with something else and more It looks like a very interesting thing. It looks like basically moving unity into the modern era

Which is more modular more customizable. It's probably also a very good thing for various distributions Which will now be able to probably better integrate unity with some customizations Let's say for example fedora wanted a unity spin You might let's imagine but they didn't want to ship it because it meant not having wayland as the default Well now they could ship a version of unity x That uses a a window manager that is not compass and that is compatible with wayland

For example motor the window the window compositor the window manager for gnome And maybe that would work well, and maybe they could have a unity spin now So it's a good thing, but I still don't really understand why the normal unity keeps existing in that case

Okay, now time to talk about KDE. We have a few small updates on KDE as well With the system settings lending yet more UI improvements Yet more user interface improvements They now let you add custom commands to keyboard shortcuts with a way nicer interface than before The launch feedback page in the settings Which is that thing that lets you tweak the bouncing icons near the mouse cursor when you launch an application

Your mouse cursor was moving around and you could see a small icon of what you just clicked Bouncing next to that cursor. Well, this used to have its own settings page Now it's being merged in the cursor settings, which makes total sense

So you have one less settings page, but you still have the options. That's really good The highlight change settings button has been removed from the sidebar and moved to the hamburger menu Which is a change i'm not a fan about because it's far less visible And so people will probably not use it as much And that's about it for the system settings basically as with every KDE week or KDE release we can expect 5.27

To have a much better system settings with more improvements more legibility and stuff like that Other UI changes to KDE include improvements to the touch mode Which now lets you access all the features of the plasma panel editing mode, which wasn't the case before You also have the kickoff main menu which shows separators that you might have added You can edit that main menu the contents of that main menu by right-clicking it

It opens an application that is called KMenuEdit and so you can reorder applications add Launch options to various applications or change categories and you can add separators, but these weren't displayed On the menu when you opened it So now it's going to be the case And that kickoff menu will also switch to a more compact layout on very small screens Which I guess is okay if you have like a netbook of your and you want to keep using KDE on it And they're also the usual bug fixes

133 bugs were fixed this week, which is enormous and they have a new documentation page, which will let people better understand how to package KDE apps with Flatpak which I heard is a big problem with Flatpak like some applications are really tricky to package and getting started isn't easy So it's cool that they have more documentation about that because well Flatpak is great But it will be greater if every app uses it. It will greatly improve the development speed. So that's really cool

Now let's finish our roundup of desktop environments this time. It's just desktop environment adjacent It's about Pop! OS. If you're using Pop! OS, they just delivered a brand new update to your system Which enables ZRAM support If you don't know what ZRAM support is, like I was before reading the article from OMG Ubuntu It's a system that compresses the RAM that is currently not used So for example, you have three apps opened. One has been untouched for let's say 30 minutes

Uh, that's just an arbitrary number, but let's say 30 minutes. The RAM it occupies will be compressed uh with with the ZRAM software Which means it's going to use less space in your physical memory So you have more free space to do other things, which is a good thing and when you resume that application It's going to be uncompressed By your CPU and so you're gonna take back that amount of memory But another application might be compressed in its place to keep some free RAM at all times

It's basically really great if you play video games because it means that all the apps that are running in the background can get compressed At the cost of a little bit of CPU when you resume them And it also means that the system has less need of writing to the swap file or the swap partition Which is basically fake RAM, which is located on your hard drive or your SSD and hard drives and SSDs are generally slower to read and write than physical RAM

Which means that the more you use swap the less your computer acts quickly So being able to keep as many things in RAM as possible Even if it's compressed is beneficial compared to using the swap file or the swap partition It's going to cost you a few CPU cycles to decompress that RAM and recompress it on the fly

But generally CPUs are good enough and have enough cores available. So that isn't really an issue Apparently it's gonna help Well, obviously it's gonna help older system like old potato computers that don't have that much RAM, which is good But it's also going to have a nice impact on computers with more RAM If you tend to always saturate the RAM that you have which is good Now some people have said that ZRAM can actually decrease performance in certain scenarios

Especially in video games and i'm guessing it's when the game is split between many different processes Some of them might be put to sleep too early and so they have to be resumed and decompressed And so your CPU is always compressing or decompressing something and this might reduce the performance I would think that's one of the main Problems that you could have but system 76 said that their implementation should not suffer from that problem

Which I mean is pretty cool. And I also learned that apparently fedora already has ZRAM Included and enabled and i've been using it without knowing it for the past year or so And so I can't say I found any issues on my end My computer has always been very well all my computers running fedora have always been very very responsive

Okay, last little tidbit before moving on to the gaming news. It's about chromium If you use chromium on linux, you might have been frustrated by the scrolling speed For some reason on linux, they only scrolled by 53 pixels pixels increments When on windows they scrolled by 120 pixels and firefox on linux scrolls by 130 pixels each time you scroll This meant that scrolling on chromium could be

Extremely slow. You had to move your your scroll wheel a lot more Or you had to move your fingers on a touchpad a lot more to get to where you wanted to go in a web page Especially considering that now a lot of articles have the first three paragraphs being completely useless recaps Just written for seo and and google and not for the actual reader This means that you often always have to scroll to get to the part that you actually want to read

So now finally chromium 109 version 109 fixes that thing moves the scroll step to 120 pixels just like on any other operating system And so all other chromium based browsers should benefit from that as well

Including chrome itself if they didn't already had patches for this. I'm pretty sure that edge And and brave for example had patches for this because I don't remember And brave for example had patches for this because I don't remember them Scrolling very badly the last time I did my browser benchmarks Okay. Now let's talk about some gaming. Uh, we first we have the release of proton next 7.0-6

Proton next is the very next release of proton that is coming. It's not a stable release, but it's close enough And it's making a bunch of new games playable this one like the uncharted legacy of thieves collection Uh gotham knights or heroes of the dark And it also brings the usual slew of bug fixes and performance improvements for existing games Now they also updated proton experimental, which is like the very unstable version of proton the even more alpha quality

Testing release that you can use and this one fixes a bunch of stuff like alt tabbing being broken on gnome 43 And uh letting halo infinite run even though there are still plenty of graphical glitches on nvidia Apparently on amd it's okay, but on nvidia plenty of texture bugs and rendering glitches But at least the game can run which is pretty cool Now another thing is about emulation, uh, specifically wii and gamecube emulation dolphin

The emulator is getting a nice big performance boost using vulkan They've been switching to the vulkan memory allocator to better handle ram and well not ram graphical memory on your gpu And this should result in performance being massively better for certain titles, especially the super mario galaxy titles Which should now be able to reach 140 fps on the steam deck when before they were at about 80

And most games should also see better performance, but not necessarily of that magnitude, of course But it's still nice to have better emulation running now on that note I tried running the wii u emulator on my steam deck using emu deck and using the wine version and using the native linux app image But I could not successfully run a single game They all failed with the same exact error message

Which was very frustrating and prompted me to actually buy a switch to play my old wii u games that I just re-bought. So yeah stupid me And the last news of this video is going to be about nvidia open source drivers I kept the best for last if you're an nvidia user

So a while back I already talked about it in an old video. I think it was in october last year Somebody decided to start working on a new free and open source driver for nvidia using vulkan It was based on the sources that nvidia released they had nvidia released an open source driver themselves But it's not really compatible with the linux kernel format and it's just not usable in its state in its state But it still reveals enough about nvidia's architecture

That the developer could think about implementing a competent driver without doing any reverse engineering compared to the nuvo driver Which is the current free and open source one, which really doesn't work all that well because it's basically a big giant hack Based on reverse engineering they did an excellent job for the data they had but it was never going to be a good option

This new driver is called nvk and it could already run a graphical desktop environment, but now we can even run some games Using vulkan which is cool Now apparently the performance is still completely horrible They showed the talos principle running at 5 fps, which is definitely not something that you want to play But still it can render the game and the game looks rendered pretty nicely Now the developer already knows how to fix the performance issue and they're already working on it

Which means that we might have a first functional version of that driver In the not so distant future probably during this year. It probably will not be In feature parity with the proprietary nvidia drivers. It probably will not have the same performance But it might allow some people to do what they need to do without resorting to a proprietary driver, which is cool Now for me personally, the thing that i'm interested in is will it support opencl so I can still run davinci resolve

Or is that going to be limited for some reason to the proprietary driver? There might be licensing issues or copyright issues But basically why I need nvidia is because no other graphics card can run a good enough opencl implementation

That davinci resolve supports. If the open source drivers support that I am moving to the open source drivers in a heartbeat Because well, I don't really want proprietary stuff on my own desktops and laptops if I can avoid it So yeah, pretty good news on that front And that concludes this podcast. I hope you enjoyed listening to it It was a little bit longer than usual well than usual than the first episode that I released the previous episode

I can't exactly say I have a huge track record with this podcast. It's only episode two, but still thank you for listening to it I hope you enjoyed it If you want to discuss any of these topics, you can hit me up on mastodon at thelinuxexp Or you can hit me up directly on the podcast website and leave a comment underneath the episode on podcast.thelinuxexp.com

I think you will need a Fediverse enabled account. So mastodon, pixelfed, whatever But you can leave a comment and we can discuss that thing And if you really enjoy the podcast and you want me to keep doing it Don't hesitate to check out my patreon page in the show notes or to visit the paypal link to donate whatever you can

Every little bit helps. This thing is not funded for now. It's extra work It's basically a full day of work on top of the channel So if you like it, it's always appreciated to have a little bit of support whether it's a comment whether it's a share

Or just a little bit of funding. It's always nice The podcast should also be available now on iTunes and Spotify completely Which means that you can follow it anywhere you like It's obviously on my own website You can follow it using the Fediverse because it's hosted on Castopod So you can subscribe to the podcast using mastodon for example and get all the new episodes there Or there's an RSS link on the page of the podcast as well So you can add it to any other client that you like

So thank you all for listening to the podcast Thanks to everyone that supports the channel and makes this podcast possible And I guess you will hear me in the next one next week. Bye

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