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OMG! Ubuntu

Rudra is a new keyboard-driven launcher for GNOME Shell

The world isnโ€™t short on keyboard-based Linux launchers. Albert, Ulauncher, rofi and GNOME Do (if youโ€™re old enough to remember that one) are among those Iโ€™ve written about in the past. Rudra is a new spin on this old staple โ€“ albeit without the extensibility dedicated quick launchers provide. Whatโ€™s different here is that itโ€™s implemented as a GNOME Shell extension, not a standalone app. The developer of Rudra, Nark Agni, describes it as a โ€œlightning-fast, keyboard-centric launcher [โ€ฆ] designed for power usersโ€. Though inspired by Mac apps like Alfred and Raycast, it is far less capable than those. To [โ€ฆ]

LWN.net

[$] Open-source Discord alternatives

The closed-source chat platform Discord announced on February 9 that it would soon require some users to verify their ages in order to access some content โ€” although the company quickly added that the "vast majority" of users would not have to. That reassurance has to contend with the fact that the UK and other countries are implementing increasingly strict age requirements for social media. Discord's age verification would be done with an AI age-judging model or with a government photo ID. A surprising number of open-source projects use Discord for support or project communications, and some of those projects are now looking for open-source alternatives. Mastodon, for example, has moved discussion to Zulip. There are some alternatives out there, all with their own pros and cons, that communities may want to consider if they want to switch away from Discord.

LWN.net

The Book of Remind

Dianne Skoll, creator and maintainer of the command-line calendar and alarm program Remind, has announced the release of The Book of Remind. As the name suggests, it is a step-by-step guide to learning how to use Remind, and a useful supplement to the extensive remind(1) man page. The book is free to download.

LWN.net

Security updates for Friday

Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (grafana), Debian (gegl, inetutils, libvpx, nova, and python-django), Fedora (azure-cli, chromium, microcode_ctl, python-azure-core, python3.14, and roundcubemail), Red Hat (grafana and osbuild-composer), SUSE (apptainer, dnsdist, istioctl, libsoup, openCryptoki, python-nltk, python311, python313, rclone, and thunderbird), and Ubuntu (libvpx, linux-azure, linux-azure-5.4, linux-azure-fips, and linux-intel-iotg).

Phoronix

Drgn v0.1 Released For Very Versatile Programmable Debugger

Drgn is the programmable debugger developed by Meta engineer Omar Sandoval that has proven quite versatile and popular with Linux kernel developers and others. After nearly two dozen releases already, Drgn v0.1 was released this week as another big step forward for this open-source debugger...

Phoronix

Linux 7.0 Shows Significant PostgreSQL Performance Gains On AMD EPYC

When beginning some early Linux 7.0 kernel benchmarking this week for looking at its performance in its early development state, I started off testing on Core Ultra X7 "Panther Lake" in being hopeful for better performance with the maturing Arc B390 Xe3 graphics and the like. But I ended up finding Intel Panther Lake seeing some performance regressions on Linux 7.0. So next up I turned to an AMD EPYC Turin server since if regressions existed there at least it's much faster to carry out bisecting of the kernel performance regressions. But with that initial testing wrapped up, I didn't find any regressions like with Panther Lake and standing out were some rather enticing PostgreSQL database server performance benefits when running atop Linux 7.0.