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September 22, 2023

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00:51:27
The GNOME 5 Year plan: Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, & Nonexistent PowerPoint Slides

This is what the GNOME Foundation has been working on, in secret, for the last 6 months?

Read the article: https://lunduke.locals.com/post/5691475/the-gnome-5-year-plan-diversity-equity-inclusion-nonexistent-powerpoint-slides

00:35:02
Support Independent Tech Journalism!

48 hours. Get a Lifetime Subscription. Get some cool downloads. Support true Tech Journalism.

https://lunduke.locals.com/post/5693626/the-increasingly-rare-lunduke-journal-48-hour-mega-fundraiser-event

00:17:41
November 22, 2023
The futility of Ad-Blockers

Ads are filling the entirety of the Web -- websites, podcasts, YouTube videos, etc. -- at an increasing rate. Prices for those ad placements are plummeting. Consumers are desperate to use ad-blockers to make the web palatable. Google (and others) are desperate to break and block ad-blockers. All of which results in... more ads and lower pay for creators.

It's a fascinatingly annoying cycle. And there's only one viable way out of it.

Looking for the Podcast RSS feed or other links? Check here:
https://lunduke.locals.com/post/4619051/lunduke-journal-link-central-tm

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The futility of Ad-Blockers
November 21, 2023
openSUSE says "No Lunduke allowed!"

Those in power with openSUSE make it clear they will not allow me anywhere near anything related to the openSUSE project. Ever. For any reason.

Well, that settles that, then! Guess I won't be contributing to openSUSE! 🤣

Looking for the Podcast RSS feed or other links?
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openSUSE says "No Lunduke allowed!"
September 13, 2023
"Andreas Kling creator of Serenity OS & Ladybird Web Browser" - Lunduke’s Big Tech Show - September 13th, 2023 - Ep 044

This episode is free for all to enjoy and share.

Be sure to subscribe here at Lunduke.Locals.com to get all shows & articles (including interviews with other amazing nerds).

"Andreas Kling creator of Serenity OS & Ladybird Web Browser" - Lunduke’s Big Tech Show - September 13th, 2023 - Ep 044

A little note from the President of System76.

😎👍

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5 hours ago

The craziest thing happened to me yesterday. As I was about to enter my home, a man jumped from the bushes and said: "I'm from the door manufacturing company. You can't enter your home right now; I need to work on the door for the next hour. We found a vulnerability. If your door was located in Antarctica, the cold temperature might loosen the lock and allow a break-in (plus, we're going to color your door purple since it's more modern)."

I told him I'm not interested, and he asked whether I'd like him to come back in an hour. I told him to never come back and thought that was the end of it.

When I woke up the next morning, I found out that he had sneaked in the middle of the night and reworked the door! He painted it purple, removed the door handle, and pasted a bunch of posters with ads.

Should I go to the police? (If I figure out how to leave the house)

5 hours ago

Think of SparkleShare like Dropbox using GitHub as the backend. It is super simple to set up, and it is open source.

This is great for backing up documents, password databases, bookmarks, and other everyday files in an encrypted format basically for free.

SparkleShare creates a special folder on your computer. You can add remotely hosted folders (or "projects" ) to this folder. These projects will be automatically kept in sync with both the host and all of your peers when someone adds, removes or edits a file.
Frequently changing project files, like text, office documents, and images
Tracking and syncing files edited by multiple people
Reverting a file to any point in its history
Preventing spying on your files on the server using encryption

https://github.com/hbons/SparkleShare

https://www.sparkleshare.org/

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The Increasingly Rare Lunduke Journal 48 Hour Mega Fundraiser Event
Get a Lifetime Subscription. Get some cool downloads. Support true Tech Journalism.

The Lunduke Journal is a pretty unique publication.

  • No annoying ads.  None at all.
  • We take no money from any company (no Big Tech influence).
  • And we tackle the topics no other Tech News outlet is willing to cover (plus a healthy dose of computer history and nerdy fun to keep things balanced).

None of which would be possible without nerds, like you, subscribing to The Lunduke Journal.

To keep the lights on, we are having one of our, increasingly rare, big promotions.  Looking to support the work of The Lunduke Journal?  Now's the time.

From now through Saturday, June 1st, 2024 (the next 2 days), we are making available the popular "Lifetime Subscription"... as well as a few extra perks for new Annual and Lifetime Subscribers (free copies of all Linux Tycoon games, and a DRM-free download of Linux Sucks 2024).

Lifetime Subscriptions Available!

We used to offer Lifetime Subscriptions here at The Lunduke Journal -- pay once, get full access for life.

Then we stopped.  Many of you have asked if you could still get one of those fancy-shmancy Lifetime Subscriptions.  I've had to turn all of you down.

Well, now's your chance.

For the next ~48 hours (through Saturday, June 1st, 2024), you can pick up a full Lifetime Subscription to The Lunduke Journal for $200.

Here's how to do it:

  1. Go to Lunduke.Locals.com/support.
  2. Choose the "Give Once" option.
  3. Enter $200 into the amount field.
  4. Boom.  Lifetime access.

(Note: You will be notified that you will receive "One Month" of access to Lunduke.Locals.com.  Ignore this.  On the backend, Lunduke will use his magic to turn your account into a Lifetime one.  This usually takes less than an hour, during "Lunduke is awake" hours.) 

Yes.  You can use Bitcoin for that.

While The Lunduke Journal doesn't normally accept Bitcoin... for the next 48 hours we do.  But only for Lifetime Subscriptions.

Here's how to get a Lifetime Subscription with Bitcoin:

1. Make sure you have a Lunduke.Locals.com account (a free account works just fine).

2. Send $200 worth of Bitcoin to the following address:

bc1qyjakve8fywm8pz2v99v57yhjj0vzr2vjze6fcq

3. Email "[email protected]" with the following information: What time you made the transaction, how much was sent (in Bitcoin), and the email address you use (or plan to use) on Locals.com.

Here's a handy-dandy QR code you can scan that also has a Bitcoin Wallet Address for The Lunduke Journal:

102127_2uuarwwiqcds5s2.jpeg

Linux Tycoon & Downloadable Linux Sucks 2024!

Here's an extra little bonus:

If you grab a new Annual Subscription or Lifetime Subscription, you will also receive a coupon code for a free copy of the following:

Note: All Lunduke Journal subscribers have full access to watch every "Linux Sucks" video ever made.  Even free subscribers get that.  But not everyone gets a DRM-free MP4 download which you can then backup or watch on any off-line device.  Which is nifty.

Note 2: You will receive the coupon codes -- redeemable via Itch.io -- for these two items, via email, within 24 hours after you setup your subscription.  Most of you will receive the coupon codes within an hour or two.

Note 3: Just a reminder... this is not available with the standard Monthly subscription.  Only new Annual or Lifetime Subscriptions.

F.A.Q.

Q: I already have a Monthly or Annual subscription, can I get some sort of discount for the Lifetime Subscription?

A: Nope.  Figuring that out is just too much work.  I need to keep it simple and streamlined to process everything.

Q: What if I already have a Lifetime Subscription?  Can I get another one and get the coupon codes you mentioned?

A: Sure?

Q: What if I want to pick up a Lifetime Subscription... sometime next week?

A: Nope.  Sorry.  No rain checks.  If you want one, now's the time.

Q: I just want to support The Lunduke Journal with a one-time donation.  How do I do that?

A: You are awesome.  You can either choose to "Give Once" (in any amount) from Lunduke.Locals.com/Support.  Or you can send a donation, in Bitcoin, to the same Bitcoin address listed above.  Just be sure to email bryan at lunduke.com so I know you sent it... and so I can give you a massive virtual high-five.

Q: Can I gift a subscription to someone else?

A: Absolutely.  There are two ways to do that.  For a regular subscription, log in to Lunduke.Locals.com via the website.  On the right hand side of the page you will see a "Gift Subscription" button.  Click that and follow the instructions.  For a Lifetime Subscription, simply follow the instructions for getting your own Lifetime Subscription above, then email bryan at lunduke.com with details on who you would like to send the subscription to.  Easy peasy.

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The GNOME 5 Year plan: Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, & Nonexistent PowerPoint Slides
This is what the GNOME Foundation has been working on, in secret, for the last 6 months?

The GNOME Foundation -- the organization behind the Desktop Environment used by nearly every Enterprise Linux company -- has had a pretty wild ride as of late.

First they hired a new Executive Director, who was previously a "Professional Shaman" (a fact they immediately worked to hide... which was... you know... weird).  Then it becomes clear that they were in incredibly dire financial straits and needed to implement an emergency spending freeze.

No ifs, ands, or buts about it, the GNOME Foundation is having a rough go of it.

But, fear not!  For the GNOME Foundation's Board of Directors has announced a draft of a glorioius "Five Year Strategic Plan", painstakingly designed to solve their financial woes and get GNOME back on the right track.

From their announcement:

"This draft was created over a six-month period through a process that involved research, individual interviews, and group discussions with staff, board, and members. This draft has been reviewed by the Board and is now ready to share with the greater community."

That's right.  This plan took six months to create.  Six.  Months.  Making it, assuredly, the most well researched, detailed, comprehensive plan in the history of Open Source Software!

Prepare to be Disappointed

I'll jump right to the point:  This plan is neither detailed nor comprehensive.  It is not a "took 6 months" plan... heck... it's not even a "took 6 hours" plan.  It is, in fact, vague, poorly thought out, filled with DEI buzz words, and heavily reliant on wishy thinking.

The best thing I can say about this plan is that it is, thankfully, extremely short.

The GNOME Five Year Strategic Plan consists of just over 1,000 words and is broken up into three "Strategic Goals" sections:

  1. People
  2. Initiatives
  3. Capacity & Infrastructure

Let's go through the primary points of each section, shall we?  I mean... it's short!  So it won't take long!

(Note: The summarized points below are only slightly summarized, mostly to remove flowery, vague language... the entire, complete Five Year Strategic Plan contains very few additional details whatsoever.)

Goal One: People

Here we go.  One bullet point at a time.  With commentary and analysis on each.

  • Take the voting board from seven to eleven members.

Ok.  There are 7 board members.  They want to add 4 more.  Now there will be 11.  How will that help GNOME?  Who knows.  But it's worth noting.  Because it's one of the few times, in this whole plan, where actual numbers are mentioned.

  • Create a more inclusive leadership model prioritizing advancing women, people of color, people from under-represented regions, and people with disabilities to positions of leadership.

Ah.  Here we go.  Right out of the gate.  "Prioritizing" specific groups over others.  Also known as discrimination.

How, exactly, does discriminating against some groups -- while falsely claiming "inclusivity" -- bring in additional funds (which GNOME desperately needs to stay operational)?  Beats me!

  • Communicate the social-benefit of GNOME by describing how GNOME directly empowers people, including under-served people.

Who, exactly, are these "under-served people"?  Under-served... of what?  Spaghetti?  Have they been served too small a portion of spaghetti?

That's a joke.  We know it's not referring to spaghetti.  Or do we?  This plan doesn't say what they're talking about at all.  It might as well be all about spaghetti!

And what would the "social-benefit" be?  You know... exactly.  This plan doesn't say.  Because that would be specific.  And this plan is anything but specific.  Or useful.

  • Activate more diverse, under-served, female, transgender, and younger users and creators.

"Hey, how can we bring in a ton more money -- to bring our software development foundation back from the brink of bankruptcy?"

"Hmm.  I dunno!  Maybe say something about diversity?  Oh!  Throw in the word 'transgender'!  That oughta do it!"

  • Create GNOME Pathways Initiative (“Pathways”), an education program that recruits, mentors, educates, involves, and elevates as leaders new creators from Africa, Latin America, Asia.

Ok, here's an idea that actually has a little merit.  Recruit people, in various locales, to work on GNOME related projects.  Great.  Do that.  Why does this need to, specifically, be focused on "Africa, Latin America, and Asia"?  That's not made clear in the plan.  Maybe somebody really wants to take a trip to those areas?

It's also not clear how this would be done.  Or what sort of specific, measurable goals this would have.  Vague as vague can be.

But at least it's the beginning of a real idea.

  • Launch a badging program — “powered by GNOME”

Right about now, you might be thinking, "Wait... they've worked on this for half a year... and they only have vague concept of creating a 'badging program' but haven't come up with anything else about it?"

Yup.

  • Strategic partnerships with governments, universities, and nonprofit partners to reach new, under-served and diverse audiences.

Diverse!  Under-served!  Vague!  Huzzah!

Goal Two: Initiatives

  • Document all successes and impacts and incorporate all the new narrative into a refreshed GNOME Foundation website.

Ok.  This actually seems reasonable.  (Despite the structure of that sentence making my eyes bleed.)

Tell people all of the cool things GNOME has accomplished.  Makes sense!  That's the start of a marketing idea, right there!

... and it took the GNOME Foundation (and their new Executive Director) 6 months to simply come up with that idea.  Shoot.  Completing that entire task shouldn't take more than a small fraction of those "6 months".

What, exactly, has the GNOME Executive Director been doing for the last half year?  

  • Integrate fiscal sponsorship for Flathub apps and GNOME Circle apps

Integrate... fiscal sponsorship... for Flathub apps.

Huh.  Ok.  So... finding companies, or organizations, to become sponsors (read: advertisers) within software distributed via Flathub?  Well.  That's one possible way to raise funds.

Putting ads and sponsorships into software, though.  That sounds very... Microsoft-y.

  • Identify current critical security weaknesses in GNOME and fix them.

Wait.  GNOME wasn't fixing security weaknesses already?

That... that can't be the case.  Right?

  • Create more documentation and tooling for GNOME as a whole; having these things will also fuel increased accessibility, diversity, equity, and inclusion for creators and users.

Diversity!  Equity!  Inclusion!

That'll definitely, magically, earn GNOME more money!

Wait.  Documentation = increased Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion?

But.  How?  What?  Trying to make sense of that is making my nose bleed.

  • Create a more strategic, more inclusive, less expensive, more worldwide, and greener annual event for GNOME.

Remember when you were having a conversation with that software developer friend of yours, and he said, "Gee.  I'd absolutely go to a GNOME conference... but they just aren't green or inclusive enough."?

But, hey, less expensive events!  That seems like a good thing!

  • Identify and market to new, outward-facing, under-served, and diverse audiences.

Oh, my gosh.  Seriously?  Again with the "under-served" and "diverse" mishegaas?

What in the heck does that mean, anyway?  So if a new, potential GNOME user (or developer) isn't in whatever "diverse" group the GNOME Foundation randomly defines in the moment (because it's not called out in the "plan")... GNOME doesn't want them around?

What a weird -- and stupid -- thing to include in a plan.

Goal Three: Capacity & Infrastructure

  • Document and claim in writing through a case for support and slide deck what we have already accomplished.

Read that sentence again.  Say it out loud.  Slowly.

Then remember that this sentence took 6 months to write.  And was reviewed by the GNOME Board before being published.

Also... they didn't take 6 months to make a slide deck.  They took 6 months to say "hey, we should make a slide deck some day".

  • Quantify our impact in numbers through charts and graphs

"Hey, you know what successful Foundations have?  Charts and graphs!  Based on numbers!  Let's come up with some of those!"

6 months to think of that... but not actually make any charts.  Or graphs.

  • Seek funding for GNOME Development

SixMonths.  Just to think of the 5 words that sum up the entire, obvious reason why their foundation existed in the first place. 

Seek funding for GNOME Development.

This is something that their Executive Director (and Board) should be doing.  Every day.  Constantly.

They just took half a year... to think about maybe doing it.

  • Two or three crowdfunding campaigns each year for hard-to-fund meta activities to raise between $50K and $200K per initiative.

Great!  How many crowdfunding campaigns has GNOME run in the last half year?  Oh.  Zero?  But they want to have two or three per year?  Better get busy.

Because, you know, GNOME is running out of money.  Chop chop!

  • Fundraise around becoming a Flathub sponsor; collect demographics for contributors in Github.

Wait.  Collect demographics for contributors in GitHub?  What in the heck does that mean, exactly?  And how are those collected personal demographic details monetized?

This feels like something that's going to get GNOME yelled at.

  • Develop direct funding relationships with at least twenty new foundations, at least 20 new corporate partners, and at least ten government agencies in 2024.

Ok.  Great.  Finally!  A goal with an actual, measurable set of numbers on it!

How much of this has been accomplished in the last half year?  Was it just thought about... or was it acted upon?

Will details on this be published so GNOME members and contributors can see how the Executive Director and Board are performing against these goals?

  • Increase staff capacity by hiring (multiple new positions).

So... spend more money.  Money GNOME does not have. 

But will definitely have soon.  Wink wink.  Because of this totally sweet "Five Year Strategic Plan".  Also... diversity.

That's it.  Really.

And that brings us to the end of a complete analysis of nearly every point of this... ahem... plan.

A plan with an almost startling lack of details.

A plan primarily focused on repeating words like "diverse", "under-served", and "inclusive"... with very little focus on an actual strategy for keeping the GNOME Foundation afloat.

A plan that could have been written in a short afternoon.  During commercial breaks while watching reruns of Scooby Doo.

In fact... this article contains more words than the entire "GNOME Five Year Strategic Plan".  Seriously.

And, yes.  I wrote this during commercial breaks... while watching reruns of Scooby Doo.

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6 cool looking top (& htop) alternatives
Because terminal-based task managers should look sweet.

Everyone knows top (the performance monitor and task manager). And, of course, htop… which is like top… but ever so much fancier and nicer looking.

But there are more — oh-so-many more — options for terminal-based system managers. Let’s look at six of them. With screenshots. (Because screenshots are important.)

ytop

ytop, while no longer maintained, is still quite excellent. And, like all software written in Rust, it tells you “I am written in Rust” right at the top of the Readme file.

Because, hey. What’s the point of writing software in Rust if you don’t tell anybody? That’d be like being a Vegan, Arch user… but keeping that information to yourself. Pointless.

bottom

Multiple themes. A number of visualizers and widgets. bottom is a fairly customizable htop alternative. Looks pretty clean, as well.

Plus, it gets brownie points for being named bottom. Because… you know… it’s not top. A good, solid, punny name right there.

Total side note: The only screenshot provided, by the developer, for bottom is in the form of an animated GIF. Ok. No problem. But it’s a 7.1 MB GIF. With thousands of frames. The only screenshot for bottom is literally larger than DOOM. That’s crazy. Above is an actual screenshot that is, you know, not as large as DOOM. You’re welcome.

vtop

vtop looks pretty nice. But… well… it’s written in Node.js. Javascript in the terminal? As the French would say, “le barf.” (I am mostly including it in this list so that I can say “le barf”.)

Seriously.  It really does look great.  Clean.  Easy to understand.  Easy on the eyes.

But.  You know.  Le barf.

glances

glances, besides being fairly cool looking, has one rather nifty feature: you can use it in the terminal… or via a web interface… that looks just like the terminal.

Why would you want to use it via a web browser, on a remote server, when you can just SSH into the server and use the terminal version? Who knows. But it’s cool that you can!

nmon

nmon (or “Nigel's performance Monitor”) has an absolute boat-load of features (including exporting performance data).

Bonus: Not written in Javascript using NodeJS.  Pure C.  So.  Not le barf.

btop

btop looks like a terminal task manager… designed by a BBS ANSI artist from the mid-1990s. And… well… I rather dig that.

Lots of features.  All in C++. Highly customizable look and feel. Will make you feel like a l33t 90s hAx0r in a jiffy.

Not gonna lie. Btop might be my favorite.  Some of the others are pretty awsome too, though.  It's a tough choice.

I recommend you install a few of these.  Just to be sure.

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