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New Rule Forbids GNOME Shell Extensions Made Using AI-Generated Code

An anonymous reader shared this report from Phoronix: Due to the growing number of GNOME Shell extensions looking to appear on extensions.gnome.org that were generated using AI, it's now prohibited. The new rule in their guidelines note that AI-generated code will be explicitly rejected: "Extensions must not be AI-generated While it is not prohibited to use AI as a learning aid or a development tool (i.e. code completions), extension developers should be able to justify and explain the code they submit, within reason. Submissions with large amounts of unnecessary code, inconsistent code style, imaginary API usage, comments serving as LLM prompts, or other indications of AI-generated output will be rejected." In a blog post, GNOME developer Javad Rahmatzadeh explains that "Some devs are using AI without understanding the code..."

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GNOME 49 'Brescia' Desktop Environment Released

✇Slashdot
著者: BeauHD
prisoninmate shares a report from 9to5Linux: The GNOME Project released today GNOME 49 "Brescia" as the latest stable version of this widely used desktop environment for GNU/Linux distributions, a major release that introduces exciting new features. Highlights of GNOME 49 include a new "Do Not Disturb" toggle in Quick Settings, a dedicated Accessibility menu in the login screen, support for handling unknown power profiles in the Quick Settings menu, support for YUV422 and YUV444 (HDR) color spaces, support for passive screen casts, and support for async keyboard map settings. GNOME 49 also introduces support for media controls, restart and shutdown actions on the lock screen, support for dynamic users for greeter sessions in the GNOME Display Manager (GDM), and support for per-monitor brightness sliders in Quick Settings on multi-monitor setups. For a full list of changes, check out the release notes.

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New GNOME Executive Director Named

✇Slashdot
著者: BeauHD
Phoronix's Michael Larabel reports: Last July it was announced Holly Million was stepping down as the GNOME Foundation's Exeuctive Director after less than a year at the helm. Richard Littauer took over as interim Executive Director while this week a new GNOME Foundation Executive Director was hired. GNOME's new Executive Director is Steven Deobald. Steven Deobald is a Canadian free software advocate and has been a GNOME user since 2002. As the GNOME Foundation Executive Director, Steven wants to focus on transparency and to better ensure financial stability of the GNOME Foundation. You can read Deobald's welcoming statements on blogs.gnome.org. Further reading: Is It Time For a Change In GNOME Leadership?

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GNOME 48 Released

✇Slashdot
著者: msmash
prisoninmate writes: GNOME 48 desktop environment has been released after six months of development with major new features that have been expected for more than four years, such as dynamic triple buffering, HDR support, and much more. 9to5Linux reports: "Highlights of GNOME 48 include dynamic triple buffering to boost the performance on low-end GPUs, such as Intel integrated graphics or Raspberry Pi computers, Wayland color management protocol support, new Adwaita fonts, HDR (High Dynamic Range) support, and a new Wellbeing feature with screen time tracking. "GNOME 48 also introduces a new GNOME Display Control (gdctl) utility to view the active monitor configuration and set new monitor configuration using command line arguments, implements a11y keyboard monitoring support, adds output luminance settings, and it now centers new windows by default."

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Is It Time For a Change In GNOME Leadership?

✇Slashdot
著者: BeauHD
Longtime Slashdot reader BrendaEM writes: Command-line aside, Cinnamon is the most effective keeper of the Linux desktop flame -- by not abandoning desktop and laptop computers. Yes, there are other desktop GUIs, such as MATE, and the lightweight Xfce, which are valuable options when low overhead is important, such as in LinuxCNC. However, among the general public lies a great expanse of office workers who need a full-featured Linux desktop. The programmers who work on GNOME and its family of supporting applications enrich many other desktops do their more than their share. These faithful developers deserve better user-interface leadership. GNOME has tried to steer itself into tablet waters, which is admirable, but GNOME 3.x diminished the desktop experience for both laptop and desktop users. For instance, the moment you design what should be a graphical user interface with words such as "Activities," you ask people to change horses midstream. That is not to say that the command line and GUI cannot coexist -- because they can, as they do in many CAD programs. I remember a time when GNOME ruled the Linux desktop -- and I can remember when GNOME left those users behind. Perhaps in a future, GNOME could return to the Linux desktop and join forces with Cinnamon -- so that we may once again have the year of the Linux desktop.

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GNOME Foundation Cuts Budget, Seeks More Volunteers and Donations

"The foundation behind the Gnome desktop environment is having to go through some serious belt-tightening..." writes Linux Magazine. From an October 7th announcement by The Gnome Foundation: Our plan for the previous financial year was to operate a break-even budget. We raised less than expected last year, due to a very challenging fundraising environment for nonprofits, on top of internal changes such as the departure of our previous Executive Director, Holly Million. The Foundation has a reserves policy which requires us to keep a certain amount of money in the bank account, to preserve core operations in the event of interruptions to our income. In order to meet our reserves policy, this year's budget had to reduce our expenditure to below expected income, and generate a small surplus to reinstate the Foundation's financial reserves to the necessary level... We're asking for your support in several ways: - Look out for opportunities to volunteer your time and skills in areas where we've had to reduce staff involvement. - Share ideas on how to organize and improve our activities in this new context. - Consider making donations to support the GNOME Foundation's core priorities, if you're able... Through these difficult decisions, the GNOME Foundation is able to meet its reserves policy, ensuring sufficient funds for the coming year. Our budget for the new financial year is realistic and supports four full time staff, who are able to support key operations like finance, infrastructure and events. We are additionally contracting a number of other individuals on a short term or part time basis, to help with fund raising, websites and delivering on our project commitments. We are going to be looking to the GNOME community to help with the areas that are most affected by our reduced staffing. If you would like to help GNOME with its events, marketing, or fundraising, we would love to hear from you. In their new budget, "expenses have been greatly reduced," according to an October 10 update: We are also very relieved to be able to provide a surplus budget for the first time in many years, and doing so while still being able to support the community: events, infrastructure, internships, travel funding, and meeting our commitment to donors for work done in some parts of the stack, e.g.: Flathub, parental controls and GNOME Software.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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GNOME Foundation To Focus On Fundraising After Years Running A Deficit

✇Slashdot
著者: msmash
The GNOME Foundation, a non-profit organization supporting the GNOME desktop environment, has been operating at a deficit for several years, depleting its financial reserves. Robert McQueen, the foundation's president, has announced plans to increase fundraising efforts in a new blog post. McQueen adds: As you may be aware, the GNOME Foundation has operated at a deficit (nonprofit speak for a loss -- ie spending more than we've been raising each year) for over three years, essentially running the Foundation on reserves from some substantial donations received 4-5 years ago. The Foundation has a reserves policy which specifies a minimum amount of money we have to keep in our accounts. This is so that if there is a significant interruption to our usual income, we can preserve our core operations while we work on new funding sources. We've now "hit the buffers" of this reserves policy, meaning the Board can't approve any more deficit budgets -- to keep spending at the same level we must increase our income.

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GNOME 46 Released

✇Slashdot
著者: BeauHD
prisoninmate shares a report from 9to5Linux: Dubbed "Kathmandu" after the host city of the GNOME.Asia 2023 conference in Kathmandu, Nepal, the GNOME 46 desktop environment is here to introduce major new features like headless remote desktop support that lets you connect to your GNOME system remotely without there being an existing session. While experimental, Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) support is another major new feature in GNOME 46, which will allow you to change the variable refresh rate of your monitor from the GNOME Settings app in the Displays section. Talking about GNOME Settings, the GNOME 46 release brings a new System panel that incorporates the Region, Language, Date, Time, Users, Remote Desktop, and About panels, as well as new Secure Shell settings. Check out the release notes and the official release video here. GNOME 46 will be available shortly in many distributions, such as Fedora 40 and Ubuntu 24.04. You can try it today by looking for a beta release here.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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GNOME Merge Requests Opened To Drop X11 Session Support

✇Slashdot
著者: BeauHD
"A set of merge requests were opened to drop X.ORG (X11) from GNOME desktop," writes Slashdot reader motang. Phoronix reports: This merge request would remove the X11 session targets within gnome-session: "This is the first step towards deprecating the x11 session, the systemd targets are removed, but the x11 functionality is still there in so you can restore the x11 session by installing the targets in the appropriate place on your own. X11 has been receiving less and less testing. We have been defaulting to the wayland session since 2016 and it's about time we drop the x11 session completely. Let's remove the targets this cycle and maybe carry on with removing rest of the x11 session code next cycle." That was followed by this merge request that would land later on -- more than likely, one cycle later -- for actually removing the X11 session code. Dropping that code would lighten up gnome-session by 3.6k lines of code directly.

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Developer Creates 'Dark Style' GNOME Extension for Ubuntu 23.10

In GNOME Shell there's a dark background for the Quick Settings menu, the calendar applet, and desktop notification-- but in Ubuntu 23.10, "the default Yaru theme uses a light style for GNOME Shell elements," according to the blog OMG Ubuntu. "But there's a new GNOME extension that lets you change this without affecting the rest of your desktop..." You can make GNOME Shell dark in Ubuntu by turning the 'Dark Style' toggle on but that also makes apps use a dark theme too. Not everyone wants that; they want a 'mixed' look... [I]f you would like to use dark GNOME Shell elements in Ubuntu 23.10 without using the dark mode preference (which, as said, will turn your apps dark too) then the Dark Style GNOME extension is exactly what you need. It only works with Ubuntu 23.10 and GNOME 45.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Nautilus File Manager Gets New Features in Upcoming GNOME 45

The upcoming release of GNOME 45 — expected September 20th — will bring new features to the Nautilus file manager (now in public beta testing). An anonymous reader shared this report from 9to5Linux: Nautilus in GNOME 45 already received a search performance boost, support for dropping images directly from web pages, an improved Grid View that now indicates starred files too, the ability to display bytes size as a tooltip for folder properties, and a more adaptive design for the sidebar. It also got an improved file opening experience while sandboxed (think Flatpak, Snap, etc.), a more consistent date and time format, a more simplistic definition of the Keyboard Shortcuts window, the ability to refocus the search bar using the Ctrl+F keyboard shortcut, and a better archiving experience. But there's room for more new features as Nautilus now received new "Search Everywhere" buttons to expand the search scope and a modern full-height sidebar layout, along with refined sidebar sizing and folding threshold. This is what Nautilus looks like in GNOME 45. The article includes some screenshots, adding that Nautilus "also received some performance improvements to more quickly generate multiple thumbnails, provide users with flickerless transition into and from search, and avoid DBus-activating other apps when it starts."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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ネットワークディスプレイ機能をGNOMEに統合

あるAnonymous Coward 曰く、

ネットワークディスプレイ機能を、GNOMEに統合する作業が行われている( OMG! Linux)。Miracastと、Chromecastに対応予定。クイック設定にあるネットワークディスプレイのアイコンをクリックすると、接続できるディスプレイが表示され、その中から選んで接続できる。プレゼンなどに便利。現在でも、GNOME Network Displays というアプリでMiracastを使うことができるが、これがGNOMEに統合されるということだ。

これは、Google Summer of Codeのプロジェクトの一つである。Google Summer of Codeは、学生がメンテナーのサポートを受けながら、OSSの開発をすることができるというものだ。GNOMEの他にも、Gentoo、openSUSE、NetBSD、FreeBSD、X.Org、GNU、KDE、QEMU、Chromium、Tor、VideoLAN、Inkscape、GIMP、Blender、Postman、Django、GitLab、Git、Jenkins、Swift、Kotlin、R、Ruby、Dart、Python、Creative Commons、OpenStreetMap、Wikimedia、Internet Archive、The Linux Foundation、など計168ものOSSプロジェクトが参加している。

来年、Google Summer of Code に参加してみようかな。

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関連ストーリー:
GNOME Shellの 「アクティビティ」ボタンの新デザインの提案がされる 2023年08月03日
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GNOME Shellの 「アクティビティ」ボタンの新デザインの提案がされる

あるAnonymous Coward 曰く、

GNOME Shellの左上に表示されている「アクティビティ」ボタン の新デザインを、GNOMEの開発者の一人である Allan Day が、GitlabのIsueで提案した(OMG! Linux)。

現在のアクティビティボタンは、名前の通り「アクティビティ」と書かれており、クリックするとアクティビティ画面が開く。開かれたアクティビティ画面では、ワークスペース(仮想デスクトップ)の整理をしたり、アプリを起動したりできる。

今回提案されたアクティビティボタンは、開かれているワークスペースの数だけ点が表示されるというデザインになっている。また、現在開いているワークスペースに対応した点は、ピルのように細長い形で表示され、現在どのワークスペースが表示されているのかがわかりやすい。また、アクティビティボタンにカーソルを合わせてスクロールすると、ワークスペースを切り替えられる。

すべて読む | オープンソースセクション | Linux | GNOME | この記事をTwitterでつぶやく この記事をFacebookで共有 この記事をGoogle Plusで共有 このエントリーをはてなブックマークに追加

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GNOME Devs Are Working on a New Window Management System

Managing windows — "even after 50 years, nobody's fully cracked it yet," writes GNOME developer Tobias Bernard: Most of the time you don't care about exact window sizes and positions and just want to see the windows that you need for your current task. Often that's just a single, maximized window. Sometimes it's two or three windows next to each other. It's incredibly rare that you need a dozen different overlapping windows. Yet this is what you end up with by default today, when you simply use the computer, opening apps as you need them. Messy is the default, and it's up to you to clean it up... We've wanted more powerful tiling for years, but there has not been much progress due to the huge amount of work involved on the technical side and the lack of a clear design direction we were happy with. We now finally feel like the design is at a stage where we can take concrete next steps towards making it happen, which is very exciting! The key point we keep coming back to with this work is that, if we do add a new kind of window management to GNOME, it needs to be good enough to be the default. We don't want to add yet another manual opt-in tool that doesn't solve the problems the majority of people face. The current concept imagines three possible layout states for windows: - Floating, the classic stacked windows model - Edge Tiling, i.e. windows splitting the screen edge-to-edge - Mosaic, a new window management mode which combines the best parts of tiling and floating Mosaic is the default — where "you open a window, it opens centered on the screen at a size that makes the most sense for the app." (Videos in the blog post show how this works.) "As you open more windows, the existing windows move aside to make room for the new ones. If a new window doesn't fit (e.g. because it wants to be maximized) it moves to its own workspace. If the window layout comes close to filling the screen, the windows are automatically tiled." You can also manually tile windows. If there's enough space, other windows are left in a mosaic layout. However, if there's not enough space for this mosaic layout, you're prompted to pick another window to tile alongside. You're not limited to tiling just two windows side by side. Any tile (or the remaining space) can be split by dragging another window over it, and freely resized as the window minimum sizes allow. So what's next? Windows can already set a fixed size and they have an implicit minimum size, but to build a great tiling experience we need more... At the Brno hackfest in April we had an initial discussion with GNOME Shell developers about many of the technical details. There is tentative agreement that we want to move in the direction outlined in this post, but there's still a lot of work ahead... We'd like to do user research to validate some of our assumptions on different aspects of this, but it's the kind of project that's very difficult to test outside of an actual prototype that's usable day to day. "There's another issue with GNOME's current windowing system," notes 9to5Linux. "If the stacking is interrupted, newly opened windows will be opened from the top, covering the first opened window." For this new windowing system to become a reality, the GNOME devs would have to do a lot of user research and test numerous scenarios so that everyone can be happy. As you can imagine, this could take months or even years, so if you want to get involved and help them do it faster, please reach out to the GNOME team here.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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GNOME 44 Released

✇Slashdot
著者: BeauHD
"9to5Linux.com reports that the GNOME 44 desktop environment is officially released and gives a detailed look at the major new features and improvements," writes Slashdot reader prisoninmate. From the report: Code-named "Kuala Lumpur" in recognition of the work done by the organizers of GNOME.Asia Summit 2022 conference, GNOME 44 introduces a GTK4 port of the Epihaphy (GNOME Web) web browser, a file chooser grid view for apps that use the standard GTK file chooser, as well as support for adding a WireGuard VPN directly from the Network panel. GNOME 44 continues to improve the Quick Settings feature introduced in GNOME 43 by implementing a submenu to the Bluetooth button to more easily and quickly connect or disconnect peripherals, adding descriptions to buttons to easily see their status, and implementing a new feature called Background Apps via a new background monitoring service in XDG portals 1.16.0." A full list of changes are available in the official release notes. The GNOME project also published a launch video on YouTube.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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83% of GNOME Users Installed Extensions, Survey Shows

Last summer GNOME invited people to voluntarily run the tool gnome-info-collect on their systems to send back (non-sensitive/non-identifiable) data about their system configurations. 2,560 people ran the tool, and they're now releasing the data. Here's the distribution of distros for all 2,560 respondents: Fedora: 1,376 (54.69%) Arch: 469 (18.64%) Ubuntu: 267 (10.61%) Manjaro: 140 (5.56%) EndeavourOS: 66 (2.62%) Debian: 44 (1.75%) openSUSE: 38 (1.51%) Pop! 38 (1.51%) Other: 78 (3.10%) And the breakdown of hardware manufacturers (top four): Lenovo: 516 (23.54%) Dell: 329 (15.01%) ASUS: 261 (11.91%) HP: 223 (10.17%) The site OMG! Linux pointed out that 90% of systems had Flatpak installed — (though it's enabled by default on Fedora, which was 54.69% of all the respondents). Some other interesting stats they noticed: - Most common default browser: Firefox (73.14%), Chrome (11.64%), Brave (4.76%). [Microsoft Edge was the default browser on 37 systems (1.51%) ] - 83% of users have at least one (non-default) GNOME extension installed - 'App Indicator' is the most popular extension (by 43% of those using extensions) - GSConnect, User Themes, and Dash to Panel/Dock also widely used - Most popular desktop apps: GIMP (58.48%), VLC (53.71%), Steam (53.40%) [...] The popularity of GNOME extensions will surprise no-one. It is a solid indicator that the existing GNOME extension system is good at doing what it's there to: let users augment and extend their system in the ways they want. GNOME's report adds that "it's exciting to see the popularity of new GNOME apps like Flatseal, To Do, Bottles, and Fragments." One other interesting stat from their report: 55% of the participants were using Online Accounts, with Google the most common one added, followed by Nextcloud and Microsoft. But "Some of the account types had very little usage at all, with Foursquare, Facebook, Media Server, Flickr and Last.fm all being active on less than 1% of systems."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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エスカレータの使いかたで口論、20歳上を蹴って投げて男性捕まる。JR秋葉原駅にて

JR秋葉原駅で、エスカレーターに立ち止まって乗っていた男性に「邪魔だ」と言ってトラブルになり、暴行を加えて大けがを負わせたとして61歳の男が逮捕されたそうだ。容疑者は下りのエスカレーターを歩いて降りている最中、立ち止まって乗っていた男性に「邪魔だ」と言って追い越そうとしたところ、被害者から「エスカレーターは歩くものではない」と注意されたことでカッとなった模様(NHK)。

hifun 曰く、

60代の男性(自称:会社役員)が、80代の男性を、秋葉の駅でエスカレータの使いかたで揉めてキレちゃって投げとばすだー蹴りを入れるだーして捕まったそうです。なんで揉めちゃうかな。

駅の客同士のトラブルなんてべつに珍しかないんで、へえニュースになるんだー、ってくらいですけど、ニュースで「秋葉原駅で」って見出しが載るとなんか胸がどきどきするようになっちゃったのは僕だけでしょうかねー。あーやだやだ。

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Vanilla OS: More Than Just Vanilla GNOME With Ubuntu

Slashdot reader Soul_Predator writes: Vanilla OS is Ubuntu on stock GNOME, with on-demand immutability and package selection freedom. It is currently a beta project, with a stable release planned for the next month. "The first-time setup process is a breeze to experience," writes It's FOSS News, applauding how it lets uses choose and enable Flatpak/Snap/AppImage. Overall, a package manager that installs applications utilizing a container, getting the ability to choose your package managers, on-demand immutability, and vanilla GNOME make it seem like a good deal to keep an eye on... I'd say it is a project that I believe a lot of users will appreciate. You can download the ISO by joining its Discord channel for now. The ISO is not yet publicly available to all. Take a look at its documentation if you are curious. However, as per the roadmap, they plan to have a release candidate soon enough.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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GNOMEプロジェクト、10 月末でメーリングリストを廃止

The GNOME Project がメーリングリストの 10 月末廃止をアナウンスしている (The Register の記事)。

メーリングリスト廃止の理由として、他のプロジェクトと同様にメーリングリストで Mailman を使用しており、Python 2 に依存するプログラムは持続可能でないこと、プロジェクトで Discourse を導入してからの数年間は Mailman の使用が減少していることが挙げられている。メーリングリストのサブスクライバーは Discourse に招待される。

新プラットフォームでは Mailman にはなかったゲーミフィケーションやマークダウンサポート、RSS フィード、まともなスパム対策、複数の認証タイプといった機能が利用可能になるという。なお、Mailman 3 はPython 3.7 以降を使用するが、プロジェクトで使用しているのは Mailman 2 のようだ(よくある質問)。

廃止は各メーリングリストで案内(例: desktop-devel-list)されているが、多数のメーリングリストの中には今回の廃止案内が投稿されるまで数か月間投稿がなかったリストもみられる。なお、10 月末の期限を過ぎるとリストはリードオンリーになるが、i18n 関連のリストは 11 月半ばまで残る見込みとのことだ。

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Apple M1 Linux GPU DRM Driver Now Running GNOME, Various Apps

✇Slashdot
著者: BeauHD
Developer Asahi Lina with the Asahi Linux project was successfully able to get GNOME running on the Apple M1, including "Firefox with YouTube video playback, the game Neverball, various KDE applications, and more," reports Phoronix. From the report: This is some great progress especially with the driver being written in Rust -- the first within the Direct Rendering Manager subsystem -- and lots of work there with the Rust infrastructure in early form. It won't be until at least Linux 6.2 before this driver could be mainlined while we'll see how quickly it tries to go mainline before it can commit to a stable user-space interface. At the moment there is also a significant driver "hack" involved but will hopefully be sorted out soon. Over in user-space, the AGX Gallium3D driver continues being worked on for OpenGL support with hopes of having OpenGL 2.1 completed by year's end. Obviously it will be longer before seeing the Apple graphics suitable for modern gaming with Vulkan, etc but progress is being made across the board in reverse-engineered, open-source Apple Silicon support under Linux. You can watch a video of the driver working here.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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