[-] farstrider@mastodon.social 1 points 11 months ago

@juli

Fair enough, I guess each to his own. If you use a distro of your choice and apply a methodology that works for you, then far be it from me to tell you how to do it. Enjoy.

[-] farstrider@mastodon.social 0 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

@petsoi @redimk

As far as my understanding goes, regarding Ubuntu, is that they are going to ditch Snap completely with Ubuntu 24.04 LTS Naughty Nightingale.

Canonical has decided to abandon the Snap project and remove it completely in the upcoming release of 24.04 code-named, Naughty Nightingale.

[-] farstrider@mastodon.social 4 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

@redimk

I'm an Arch user, so before I come across as disingenuous, I need to clarify that I just like to stick with 'pacman' as much as possible so that my install stays as "clean" as possible. Most of the time If I can't find something in pacman I can get it in the AUR. "Varia" isn't found in the AUR yet and in such cases I'll go to github and install it from there.

https://github.com/GCJMackenzie/Varia

[-] farstrider@mastodon.social 3 points 11 months ago

@petsoi

"Varia supports some basic functionality you'd expect, such as resuming incomplete downloads upon relaunch, but right now doesn't support saving files outside of your default download directory. I want to change this in the future while still having a minimal set of permissions with Flatpak."
giantpinkrobots on github

Big game changer for me is that it doesn't support saving files outside of the default download directory. Anything to do with 'Flatpak' is of a concern to me as well.

[-] farstrider@mastodon.social 1 points 1 year ago

@Guenther_Amanita @petsoi

I'm on Arch and also use a few extensions namely:

❤️ Freon: Displaying the temperature of your CPU, hard disk, solid state, and video card (NVIDIA, Catalyst, and Bumblebee supported), as well as power supply voltage, and fan speed.

OpenWeather is my other main one, but this is unfortunately broken for Gnome 45. 😪

Other minor ones all working:
Arch Linux Updates Indicator
Applications Menu
Places Status Indicator
ArcMenu [Bit of overkill I know, but I like it] 😀

[-] farstrider@mastodon.social 3 points 1 year ago

@Shady_Shiroe

Open GIMP
Go to "File" > "Open" and select your GIF.
Select the "Crop Tool" from the toolbox.
Adjust the crop area to your desired size.
Click the "Crop" button.
Go to "File" > "Export As" and choose GIF as the format. Save your cropped GIF.

FFmpeg
Use the following command to crop the GIF, replacing input.gif with your GIF's filename and specifying the crop dimensions:

ffmpeg -i input.gif -vf "crop=w:h:x:y" output.gif

farstrider

joined 5 years ago