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Help us give a big #ThankGNU to Bob Proulx, Michael Stroucken, J.Fossy Weinzinger, and Savoir-faire Linux inc. for their generous donations. Contributions such as these help the #fsf fight for freedom! Check out u.fsf.org/3vy for a full list of donors. #FreeSoftware

@StephenMckenna

That was me once upon a time but these days i'd side with AI over humanity.

@mhjohnson

@NoBeret@noauthority.social

I'd be interested except for not being an American and not trusting some shuttle built by diversity hires.

@kop316

I usually say that while Linux phones have issues those can all be fixed but the privacy and security issues will never be fixed on an iPhone, it's built in and expected behavior.

@Thanh_Le

Got more class than my cat. He's more of a wife beater wearing Jack Daniels drinker.

FOSS turn based strategy game "Tanks of Freedom II" has been updated to version 0.6.0. This update adds online multiplayer; added the option for AI players to LAN games; fixed six bugs; updated the Godot engine the game uses to version 4.2; and more. The code is licensed using the MIT license and the game is made using the FOSS Godot engine.




The game can be downloaded from Itch.io:

https://czlowiekimadlo.itch.io/tanks-of-freedom-ii




The source code is on Github:

https://github.com/P1X-in/Tanks-of-Freedom-3-D




The release notes for this update can be found here:

https://czlowiekimadlo.itch.io/tanks-of-freedom-ii/devlog/675546/version-060-is-out
FDA Director Admits They Were Unprepared For Avalanche of VAERS Reports Linked to Covid Vaccines
During House Oversight and Accountability Select Subcommittee
https://nakedemperor.substack.com/p/fda-director-admits-they-were-unprepared?publication_id=602373&post_id=141743012&isFreemail=true&r=1gndfr
Turn-based roguelike "Deadnaut: Signal Lost" is now available on Itch. It was originally released in March of 2023 on Steam but now there is a DRM free version available. It also has a native Linux version.

https://screwflystudios.itch.io/deadnaut-signal-lost
This week's donation went to KeePassXC. It's a fantastic FOSS password manager that you can find in your distro repo; a PPA; Flatpak and an App Image. You can use it on Linux; BSD; Mac and Windows. The code is licensed using GPLV2.0 and GPLv3.0.



The project's official website is here:

https://keepassxc.org/



The team has a presence on Mastodon and Matrix:

https://linuxrocks.online/@keepassxc@fosstodon.org

https://app.element.io/#/room/#keepassxc:mozilla.org (user's channel)
https://app.element.io/#/room/#keepassxc-dev:mozilla.org (developer's channel)




They accept donations through a variety of methods including FOSS options such as Open Collective and Liberapay.

https://keepassxc.org/donate/
I used @e33io's script to install #LinuxMint themes on #Devuan, which does make it look quite good. I chose themes and icons with blue to match the Devuan colors.

https://git.sr.ht/~e33io/scripts/blob/6deb134abb81416d2b4c0bf0f934711291493e49/install-mint-themes.sh

Note: curl wasn't installed with the default Devuan install, so the script didn't work until I installed curl.
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Please #boost. I'm looking for devices for storing long-term digital archives of files (text, PDF, etc, nothing exotic). Needs to be fairly futureproof. Probably doesn't need to be super high capacity (but it can be). I know certain kinds of optical media are designed for long-term storage, but I doubt our ability to find the right kind of drives in ten or twenty years, thus thinking USB will be a fairly stable physical interface. I'm willing to be convinced otherwise.

Doesn't have to be bottom-of-the-barrel; if (say) a typical USB stick isn't likely to work long term but some other USB-readable device is, I can look into that.

EDIT: After some reading I'm leaning toward an HDD, in FAT32 or EXFAT format, in a USB enclosure, with written instructions to spin it up once a year and reproduce it on new media every five years.

#archives #digitalArchiving #digitalArchives #askFedi #storage #DigitalPreservation

Question for the distro hoppers: Still reading this Linux book and it has a weird line "On Linux there's often a group called sudoers", my understanding is this is a Debianism, and most distros instead have a wheel group, is that correct?

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Game Liberty Mastodon

Mainly gaming/nerd instance for people who value free speech. Everyone is welcome.