Unlike X11, Wayland was never intended to be network transparent. As others say, solutions like waypipe and more tradionally RDP and VNC exist.
Auch bekannt als:
Unlike X11, Wayland was never intended to be network transparent. As others say, solutions like waypipe and more tradionally RDP and VNC exist.
SPRIND GmbH is also known as „Bundesagentur für Sprunginnovationen“ and owned by the Federal Republic of Germany. See https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bundesagentur_für_Sprunginnovationen and https://www.sprind.org
It supports any ONVIF compatible IP camera as well as USB cameras and the raspberry pi camera module
MotionEye used to be the go-to solution.
I am not sure about the current state of the project (the python 2/3 transition took a long while, there are only pre-releases using a modern python version).
They even implemented it in Firefox: moz://a redirects to https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/
It think this comment explains it really well: https://sh.itjust.works/comment/13239406
I don’t like it. He is just perpetuating the endless stereotypes that plague linux and harm linux adoption.
If you are using a somewhat stable distro and don’t have weird hardware, you don’t need to “write your own driver” etc. A lot more people “punch themselves in the face” by using a buggy, ad infested, data harvesting operating system even though they just need a web browser.
I think Germany’s done it twice now.
It was Munich and they switched back to Windows after M$ moved their German headquarters to Munich.
Thanks for the explanation
I don’t know moonlight and don’t know what you mean by “certain typed documents”, but AFAIK, OSMC is just Raspbian with some additional stuff. What I am saying is that media playback works just fine performance-wise for some media formats.
I run OSMC on a Pi 4 and it plays h.265 & h.264 videos at 1080p and h.262 at 576p just fine.
Some people also swear by other measures, like changing the SSH port to something else. Most people end up using 2222 to easily remember. This is borderline useless, as you can see for yourself.
While being useless against a sophisticated attacker, there hasn’t been any bot activity in my sshd logs since changing my ssh port to a different one.
Declaring the use without a paid license as “Unlicensed” is very misleading since the project is also licensed under the GNU AGPL v3.0.
You can symlink /var/lib/flatpak/exports/bin/org.gnome.Lollypop
(if you are using a system installation) or ~/.local/share/flatpak/exports/bin/org.gnome.Lollypop
(if you are using a uset installation) to ~/.local/bin/lollypop
and run it as lollypop
.
You can adjust ownership and permissions for /mnt/something
using chown
and chmod
.
I have no idea when I last updated my RasPi 0s (none of which is exposed to the public).
The “Save” button uses the accent color which is blue by default. With configurable accent colors coming to GNOME 47 and GTK/Libadwaita, you can choose a red accent color.
See the original description of the screenshot:
It’s now using standard button styles, fixing the long-standing issue where suggested and destructive buttons would look the same when using red accent color
./configure && make && sudo make install
is not the future
The error message is very detailed and there is nothing to add to it.
If you want to install an application/CLI tool, use
pipx
or your system package manager. If you want to install a library, use a virtual environment (e.g. by usingpython -m venv
) or your system package manager.