Sure did, yes!
Sure did, yes!
Possibly a bug? I can’t reproduce, the panel is keeping the custom size I set it to when I quite and restart Kmail.
Not particularly security savvy, but :
The infected devices then attempt to crack the telnet password by guessing default and commonly used credential pairs.
My understanding is that the worm is targetting connected devices with supidly simple credentials, which is why “Internet-of-Things” is mentioned?
Never mind, you need to click on “Filter”, select a particular filter and then input your search keywords. Not super intuitive, but it does work.
They said they would use OpenAlex instead, but cannot find a way to use the openalex.org website in any meaningful way. I can’t even search for an article in the database. Am I being thick?
No. Maybe a project repo will have the alpha version, to start the work into packaging Plasma 6, but it will not reach Tumbleweed itself.
There are Clementine and Strawberry that are forks of the old Amarok, but not from KDE. The current music player from KDE is Elisa.
OK, so it is trademarked and the company is using it illegally (not that I believe KDE e.V. should sue, probably a waste of time and money).
Is the KDE logo legally protected by the way?
My impression was that it was more common to have stuff like “Appearance” first, but you seem to tbe right. At least on my Android phone, network is the first item indeed. I guess I’m getting old!
Yes, I see how it would make sense (still seems a bit weird to me, but I can’t really pinpoint the reason, other than a subjective feeling I guess).
To each its own, I guess. Granted, this stuff is highly subjective.
Great news regarding the reorganisation of System Settings. I am skeptical about the sorting however? Why put “Internet” first and “Appearance” so low? Seems to me the later is often the first thing people look for in Settings (and thus often first, or near the top, in most settings).
Oops, silly me. I meant in the Compact or Small cards view.
EDIT : just tested the “Card 2.0” view, which seems an acceptable compromise to me.
OK, it’s clearer now, thanks for the explanation!
I don’t get how this works in relation with Element X. Surely, installing and using Element X is not sufficient to use Matrix 2.0 protocols is it? I mean, it must depends on the room version and the like, right?
I love Linux Libertine. An excellent font for professional looking documents!