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@ema Good point. I should try that. That said, I'm more concerned about how Archwiki says that the `udev` component which powers `UUID`-based boot device lookup has a non-trivial impact on boot times and `MODULES=list` wouldn't omit that.

@r0b0 Yes, I'm aware of that option and, as I said, I don't want to have to manually rebuild my kernel with each update. Is there an "official enough that it's unlikely to break" guide to how to hook Debian's unattended-upgrades to apply a patch to the kernel config each time one comes down?

Does anyone have any tips for reducing Debian's initramfs boot time beyond `MODULES=dep` and `COMPRESS=lz4`? I don't care enough to take on having to manually run a new kernel build every time an update comes down, but I'm having trouble finding an equivalent to Archwiki's "mkinitcpio/Minimal initramfs" page which explains what further customization hooks there are.

(I'm setting this thing up as an sccache node, so there's no GUI and it's running unattended-upgrades, but that doesn't mean I can't try to get the boot times as low as maintainably possible. I've got another one I might have to resort to running Archlinux on to get boot times appropriate for my "fake the Weecee I can't afford to build by using a fullscreen 86box" idea.)

Why am I not surprised that the one product review Amazon responded with "Edit and resubmit" to was the one where I said I had to return it because Amazon's single-SKU warehousing led the official SanDisk store to send me counterfeit SD cards inserted into the supply chain by some Amazon Marketplace seller.

In case anyone's interested, I recently added the reference links I used to the README for my practical example of how to write a maximally sandboxed systemd service when you still need to invoke a subprocess from the host system's repositories.
github.com/ssokolow/fan_remote

@vorlon @that_leaflet @popey @omgubuntu *nod* Doesn't Wine still have work to do before 32-bit WINEPREFIXes lose their dependency on i386 multiarch?

Downloaded an OSBoxes VM of Ubuntu 22.04 to test something... discovered that the "Want to hear about backup software?" popup appears to be taking lessons from Microsoft's "Free upgrade to Windows 10" popups... thankfully, before I could get back to it and check if the "I don't consent to hear more" X was just an only-on-hover thing, the screensaver kicked in and got rid of it for me. Yet another reason GNOME isn't the DE for me, I guess.

Flatpak just pushed 115 and I was called in to do tech support. (Reassure that the sudden access to landing pages that "Compact View" used to hide didn't mean account access had broken and undo the changes that didn't get automatically settings-preserved based on using an existing user profile.)

I did what I could but does anyone know why the account names are no longer alphabetized and how to put the menu bar back above the toolbar when "Hide System titlebar" is unchecked?

Fun find with a USB-DVI KVM I just got. The manual says the "double-tap scroll lock to switch" feature only works on Windows... it turns out that, instead of listening for the scroll lock KEY, it's listening for the scroll lock LED... and macs have no Scroll Lock while modern X11 leaves it unbound by default. Probably a hack for regional keyboard layout variations and keymap customization. On the plus side, the KVM can be scripted using `xset`. :)

This anecdote has some of the most "I actually LOLed" lines I've heard in a long time. →
youtube.com/watch?v=oHmgpIqqXt

I forgot to mention it for a week, but my StuffIt test files now include proper "made using the mac version of StuffIt" ones, and I've added a repo of legally clear integration test files for DiskDoubler extractors. → github.com/ssokolow/diskdouble

For fun, I decided to theme up my retro LAN's file server to match the OS each folder is for.

I decided to do the Mac 68k stuff first, and I got a little carried away with seeing what I could do without relying on CSS, so what you see is an interesting mix of "tables for presentation" plus role=none and aria-hidden=true to absolve my sins. Now to retro-test it.

(Please excuse Firefox's flaky pixel positioning when rendering the fan-made Chicago and Monaco TTFs.)

I just got around to watching the Defunctland video from three days ago. What starts as a simple question about who wrote the Disney Channel mnemonic jingle turns into a moving piece about an uncredited artist and a work of art in its own right. HIGHLY recommended. youtube.com/watch?v=b_rjBWmc1i

A huge thanks to Corel for being willing to support buyers with legacy use-cases. I am now a registered owner of that copy of WinZip Self-Extractor 2.2 (non-Personal Edition) that I wanted as a kid and, once my Windows 9x retro projects are ready, I can complement the more FOSS-friendly InnoSetup installer with a retro-authentic "InstallShield Express 2 inside WinZip Self-Extractor 2.2" distributable. (I lucked into a sealed retail copy of ISExpress2.)

I just got really nerd-sniped and rewrote my command-line launcher generator for Flatpak in Python+PyGObject, solving pretty much every flaw it had along the way.
gist.github.com/ssokolow/db565

If you've been reluctant to use Flatpak-packaged apps because of the bad command-line user experience, give it a try. Aside from not being able to expose manpages that were just plain omitted from the packages, I'd call it perfect in all ways that matter.

Cathode Ray Dude just ended his most recent video with an excellent little "anticapitalist diatribe" (as the section title calls it) expressing his frustration at how nobody makes offbeat products with the intent to actually be products anymore. → youtu.be/PDjleq0PJX0?t=2644

@phel Three problems with that. First, Kubuntu Linux 20.04 LTS doesn't provide an org.freedesktop.thumbnails.Thumbnailer1 implementation. Second, I like to keep my options open for py2exe-ing Windows builds... which means no dependencies on external system services. Third, that'd just slow things down even if I *weren't* planning to calculate some hashes while I have the image loaded into memory anyway.

@phel Funny enough, my first "bare minimum of Geeqie's collection view, but in PyQt" tester loaded already-generated thumbnails off disk twice as fast as Geeqie... which either speaks well of Qt or poorly of whatever Geeqie's doing with GTK.

@phel It's for populating the XDG shared thumbnail cache for a PyQt-based GUI I'm writing. The only reason I explored alternatives to doing it in PyQt is that I have prior experience flipping grids of pixels back and forth between PyQt and PyOpenCV and wanted to optimize for performance.

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