

Now this thumbnail is pretty funny.
Just a stern but friendly rabbit furry working as a technical writer, learning germanic languages, gaming on Linux, interested in social psychology, fandom studies, locked-room mysteries and programming. Cis, gay, kinky, pm-friendly, single.


Now this thumbnail is pretty funny.
The hands in the fourth pane…
I am both at the same time.


The seeming lack of month ordering doesn’t feel like it would be intentional after all.
That is a decent way of finding out whether the person is a native English speaker, actually.
This rarely happens to non-native speakers.


You could take inspiration from Theodore Tso’s pwgen: https://github.com/tytso/pwgen
It’s a Unix utility in C commonly used on Linux and FreeBSD to make truly random passwords. It’s the first thing I thought of when reading this.


I’d do that without a sigh :p
I’m surprised they don’t mention how it compares to SuSE’S icecream (icecc) which has been the “better distcc” go-to for a long, long time.


You’ll probably need to send a ticket to sysadmin to have that issue sorted out.
In that section, if you click the button to configure the Mouse Mark effect, you can see the shortcuts for clearing Mouse Mark:


While the summary + interview The Register did was decent, when you read the actual paper, the proposal is way more interesting.
Not a fan of mut instead of just plain mutable, though.
Also I sure hope the compiler messages for this feature won’t be like the circle examples in the proposal in the end.
A small correction:
For example, there are Kirigami bindings for Python you can use to do a desktop/mobile app.
Kirigami is QML all the way, it doesn’t need bindings since you’d be writing in QML either way. The Python part is about the actual business logic. :)

I finally finished reading it.
So far it’s the best furry visual novel I’ve read. It’s also the only horror / psychological thriller themed furry VN I know.
I absolutely loved how each character route is just as worth seeing and unravels its own set of truths, and how each individual route sort of “teases” you into reading at least two other character routes.
The soundtrack is excellent as well, especially the dark/depressing mood tracks made by abyuse. Those gave me chills everytime.
It also deals with pretty heavy themes that can be triggering, so whoever wants to try reading it should keep that in mind.
I’d be curious to see a blog post in the future mentioning the challenges you might have faced making the dock work on Wayland, and what was needed for that.
When you search using the Starred filter, usually you get the main project at the top since that’s the one with the most stars.
I added a KRunner web shortcut for this that automatically searches using that filter: https://rabbitictranslator.com/kfluff-web-shortcuts/
Looks like an old bug with kscreen that could cause two screens to merge together and would be worked around exactly the same way you did. I used to have that whenever a blackout happened, but only with Plasma 5, and often on X11.


What’s used under the hood for this is udisks, the same thing used by other file managers to achieve mounting capabilities. It allows you to mount devices without needing to mess with something cryptic and archaic like fstab and doesn’t require root.
You can always keep using fstab of course since it works, but in that case you probably also want to use fstab systemd integration.
The KDE auto mount never worked on plasma 6
Please report your issues on https://bugs.kde.org so they can actually get fixed!
Arrested Development moment