

Did they explicitly say anywhere that future versions should be coming as well? I only see them mentioning Android 16, and devices still being “supported”, but that could also mean improvements in Android 16.
Did they explicitly say anywhere that future versions should be coming as well? I only see them mentioning Android 16, and devices still being “supported”, but that could also mean improvements in Android 16.
Could you please link this explanation?
Sadly they might not be able to update GrapheneOS to new Android versions anymore :(
As use has been scaling up, the big companies try to use smaller and cheaper models to save money.
Yeah, can’t recommend Aurora enough. It’s awesome to have literally 0 driver issues, since the system image already contains the drivers pre-installed.
I’d interpret that as a local social network app, not map/navigation.
Oh, you should have mentioned that - or do you think that fsck is Memtest? It is not.
Hm, unfortunately nothing obvious. And your last boot ended with a crash?
Nevertheless you could try running a Memtest (this can take a while) - it will check whether any of your RAM modules are faulty: https://www.memtest.org/
That’s unfortunately a bit cut off. Could you run this again with the following command? sudo journalctl -xeb -1 --no-pager
Sure, though the immutable design makes it very safe to touch these things.
OP, do this - it’s the best way to figure out what’s happening. It could be any number of issues, e.g. faulty RAM. With the output of the command above people can tell you what to test for.
As such we had to install openrgb the usual system-wide way, with rpm-ostree in terminal - something I was hoping he would never had to do.
There is nothing wrong with doing that if there’s no better option. You’re not losing out on anything.
Sure, that’s one approach. But there’s probably a bunch of people that have multiple screens layed out horizontally with slight vertical offsets, and they’d probably prefer the wallpaper to be assigned as if they were in one row.
Doesn’t seem incredibly straightforward to me, since screens can be set up in any configuration relative to each other. You pretty much would have to implement multiple options to make everyone happy, at which point it’s not a small feature anymore.
Yooo that slaps
What? No I’m not. Using a memory-safe implementation of sudo doesn’t take any power away from the user, how does that make sense?
sudo-rs doesn’t have anything to do with run0. Please take your pills grandpa, we’re worried about you.
Edit: in case you’re actually an older person, the latter part wasn’t meant as a swipe (just saw your pfp). In that case, sorry!
I have used two of these - one that’s 1080p which I’ve used for years, and one that’s 1440p that broke after a short time (but that was my fault).
I don’t really use them as touch screens. I once tried with my then-work-Macbook, but it was mapped to the wrong screen, so I stopped. Since then I’ve been using it exclusively as a screen.
The colors aren’t perfect, but otherwise it’s absolutely acceptable quality - not much worse than a 5-10 year old monitor IMO. I’m driving it through Micro USB & HDMI. Be aware that somehow every couple weeks I have to continuously unplug and replug the HDMI for the monitor to recognize the signal, don’t know why.
This was probably not very helpful, sorry! If there are any specific tests you’d like me to do, I’ll gladly do them. I bought mine at a fair and have never found it online, so you won’t be able to buy it, but there’s probably much better ones available now.
KDE is allegedly better because it gives the user more options, but anyone who’s actually used it will tell you that it suffers from the same kind of bloat and braindead design decisions as gnome.
I have used it & can’t tell you this. What am I doing wrong?
Fair enough, I hope you’re correct.