Linux

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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The openSUSE Project has an official space on Hugging Face, which is a popular platform offering a range of open-source Artificial Intelligence models, tools and resources.

The new namespace can be found at huggingface.co/openSUSE.

Hugging Face is known for facilitating developers and researchers in working with advanced AI applications that include natural language processing (NLP) and computer vision.

Having the openSUSE namespace provides community-driven development toward creating, sharing and improving AI models and datasets.

One dataset has already been added. The first dataset is openSUSE Cavil, which is a tool designed for license compliance, identification and legal reviews. By leveraging the rich AI models and datasets available through the Hugging Face platform, openSUSE Cavil can offer a more advanced and accurate detection of license issues and compliance.

To get involved with the openSUSE Project on Hugging Face, individuals can sign up for an account. The registration process is straightforward and requires only basic information.

Once registered, users can explore the openSUSE and view a collection of AI models and datasets created and shared by the community.

Contributors are encouraged to share their AI models and datasets. Hugging Face offers tools and tutorials to assist with uploading and managing these contributions. Community members can work together on improving existing models or developing new ones.

High-quality documentation and tutorials are vital for the success of the project. Community members can contribute by writing guides, creating video tutorials, or translating existing resources to broaden their accessibility.

Users gain access to cutting-edge AI models and a collaborative environment where they can learn and expand their skills. Contributions to the project support the advancement of AI research and development within the open-source ecosystem.

For more information and to participate, visit huggingface.co/openSUSE.

More Information about openSUSE:

Official

Fediverse

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I've been reluctant on getting chromebooks because I know how much Google loves to encompass everyone into it's always-online, data farming ecosystem. Well I know that some select Chromebook models allow Linux to be installed on them to the point of telling ChromeOS to fuck off.

I already have one laptop that's an HP Stream with Bhali Linux on it, it's not a super powerful laptop, I just wanted to kick Windows 10 off since someone dared to install that onto it with the specs it's got.

I'm just wondering though if anyone has attempted to install Linux on this model? I plan to grab a light-weight distro and turn it into a casual laptop unlike the HP Stream one where I just have it there for personal use while my desktop is the brunt of gaming and art stuff.

I was planning to format a flashstick and go the route of using the Universal USB Installer but not sure if this Chromebook model is going to reject or worse - brick itself if any attempts were made.

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My first real attempt at ricing. Working with Hyprland. Color palette inspiration from Kripton-GTK with Gruvbox-Dark icon set.

#unixporn #shareyourdesktop #linux

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I want to run openvpn every time I log on, but currently I run

sudo openvpn --config <myconfig> --auth-user-pass <user/pass>

every time. Is there a way to make it run that automatically and not need my password?

I could make it launch a terminal and run a script but is there a way that would not require me to type my password every time? Can I maybe give myself permissions to whatever openvpn needs so it doesn't need sudo? How do I find out what those permissions are? Is this the right place to ask?

I'm running KDE/Plasma 6 on Manjaro should that matter

edit: Thanks all! I'm going to try the systemd option, if I can't get that working I'll fall back to the cronjob option, and failing that changing openvpn to not need a password for sudo and launching a script at kde statup.

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The KDE community proudly presents Plasma 6, Frameworks 6 and Gear 24.02

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Just wanted to drop there here, in case anybody finds it useful. I started doing some blogging, mostly with the intention of archiving how in the hell I've done things on Linux, in the past, so I know where to find them the next time I need to do them. There will probably be other stuff there, with time, some of it not linux related, but I'll tag the relevant stuff, so it's easier to find.

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Energy Performance Preference (EPP) updates for Meteor Lake.

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windows has built it monitor calibration, anything like it for Linux? basically to adjust gamma and rgb balabce

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Tails 6.0 anonymous OS is now available for public testing ahead of the official release on February 27th based on Debian 12 Bookworm.

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I use equalizerAPO on windows currently, is there something similar for Linux?

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This posting is intended to function not only as a tutorial but, also, as a review and commentary on my ‘long-term’ use of spectrwm as my primary window manager (long-term, meaning at least one month of daily use).

#Linux #spectrwm #Tutorial #Review #Debian #ArchLinux #OpenBSD #Technology

https://eirenicon.org/spectrwm-review-tutorial/

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Anyone here have a Linux phone? I'm super curious about the experience, if so.

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A critical vulnerability (CVE-2023-40547) has been found in the shim bootloader, leaving millions of Linux systems vulnerable to attack.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/14567056

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This is what it looks like:
HDMI 60 Hz and I switch from TTY1 (with Cinnamon) to TTY2 - it takes 7 seconds.
HDMI 60 Hz return from TTY2 to TTY1 - takes 1 second.
DisplayPort 60 Hz and I switch from TTY1 (with Cinnamon) to TTY2 - it takes 6 seconds.
DisplayPort 60 Hz return from TTY2 to TTY1 - takes 6 seconds!.

On HDMI, the return takes only a second. And that's how it should always be, right?
Yet every other case lasts 6-7 seconds. That's a ridiculously long time, and there's no reason for it to take that long, is there?

In turn, at higher refresh rates, even HDMI recovery takes 6-7 seconds.
This is also surprising behavior. As if the system/drivers(?) only supported HDMI 60 Hz exactly, but not completely, because switching to TTY2 still takes too long.

What can I do with this? Is it only possible to count on driver updates to improve things?

Monitor Gigabyte M32QC Curved 31,5"
GeForce RTX 3060 Ti 8GB
ASRock A620MHDV/M.2+
AMD RYZEN 5 7500F AM5
Kingston Fury Beast Black 16GB DDR5 (KF556C40BB-16)

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Dziwny bug, związany z HDMI/DisplayPort i częstotliwością odświeżania i przełączaniem między TTY.

Tak to wygląda:
HDMI 60 Hz i przełączam z TTY1(z Cinnamon), na TTY2 - trwa 7 sekund.
HDMI 60 Hz powrót z TTY2 na TTY1 - trwa 1 sekundę.
DisplayPort 60 Hz i przełączam z TTY1(z Cinnamon), na TTY2 - trwa 6 sekund.
DisplayPort 60 Hz powrót z TTY2 na TTY1 - trwa 6 sekund!.

Na HDMI powrót trwa tylko sekundę. I tak powinno być zawsze, nie?
A jednak każdy inny przypadek trwa 6-7 sekund. To absurdalnie długo, i chyba nie ma żadnego powodu, żeby tyle to trwało?

Z kolei przy wyższych częstotliwościach odświeżania, już nawet HDMI powrót trwa 6-7 sekund.
To też jest zaskakujące zachowanie. Jakby system/sterowniki(?) obsługiwały tylko dokładnie HDMI 60 Hz, ale też nie do końca, bo przełączenie na TTY2 nadal trwa za długo.

Co mogę z tym zrobić? Czy tylko można liczyć na aktualizacje sterowników, żeby coś się poprawiło?

Monitor Gigabyte M32QC Curved 31,5"
GeForce RTX 3060 Ti 8 GB
ASRock A620MHDV/M.2+
AMD RYZEN 5 7500F AM5
Kingston Fury Beast Black 16GB DDR5 (KF556C40BB-16)
#nvidia #linux #archlinux

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I run a web server (lighttpd) to serve a few pages to the world. I've installed the nordvpn client and when I run it two expected things happen:

  1. I lose my SSH connection to the machine, and
  2. My website becomes inaccessible to the public

Is it possible to run the VPN and still maintain the SSH connection on the local net and the web server connection on the internet?

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I'm using #MXLinux on #LiveUSB and tried to rollback it to previous remaster. However, I had updated the kernel to newer version before.
In effect, the OS "didn't finish up booting", or, rather threw (as I saw after Alt-F1) an (uncritical) error about new kernel unavailable and booted up to CLI. To recover from this, I used the same live-kernel-updater, but rolled back the kernel version instead of updating. This recovered the system.

This should be helpful also for #Antix users as both distros share their LiveUSB utilities.

#linux

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Happy Holidays!

This month:
Command & Conquer
How-To : Python, Stable Diffusion and Latex
Graphics : Inkscape
Micro This Micro That
Ubports Touch : OTA-3
Review : Kubuntu 23.10 and Linux Lite 6.
Ubuntu Games : Tiny Life

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submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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The shell history is cluttered with useless commands if stuff like tokens are included. Shell variables allow to exclude such content from the history.

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https://micronews.debian.org/2023/1702150551.html

Due to an issue in ext4 with data corruption in kernel 6.1.64-1, we are pausing the 12.3 image release for today while we attend to fixes. Please do not update any systems at this time, we urge caution for users with UnattendedUpgrades configured. Please see bug# 1057843: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1057843

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