194 Nineteen Years Old Community Gnome Discourse

Leo Migdal
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194 nineteen years old community gnome discourse

Update on what happened across the GNOME project in the week from March 28 to April 04. The low-level core library that forms the basis for projects such as GTK and GNOME. Sam James and Jakub Jelinek fixed a 19-year-old race condition in GClosure in GLib, when they initially thought they were out to fix a gcc optimisation bug! https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/4575 I released Video Trimmer v25.03, moving the trimming options from the save dialog into the main UI. This makes them more discoverable and allows for better visual feedback down the line.

Identity v25.03 is out with a minor visual refresh for GNOME 48: now using a toggle group for the display mode switcher in the main menu. You are seeing this because the administrator of this website has set up Anubis to protect the server against the scourge of AI companies aggressively scraping websites. This can and does cause downtime for the websites, which makes their resources inaccessible for everyone. Anubis is a compromise. Anubis uses a Proof-of-Work scheme in the vein of Hashcash, a proposed proof-of-work scheme for reducing email spam. The idea is that at individual scales the additional load is ignorable, but at mass scraper levels it adds up and makes scraping much more expensive.

Ultimately, this is a placeholder solution so that more time can be spent on fingerprinting and identifying headless browsers (EG: via how they do font rendering) so that the challenge proof of work page... Please note that Anubis requires the use of modern JavaScript features that plugins like JShelter will disable. Please disable JShelter or other such plugins for this domain. Protected by Anubis From Techaro. Made with ❤️ in 🇨🇦. discourse.gnome.org is GNOME’s main website for asynchronous communication (like email or a discussion forum).

It is used for project announcements, general discussions, and support and technical questions. To post or comment to GNOME’s Discourse instance, you need to be logged in. This can be done with an existing Google or Github account. It is also possible to login with a GNOME account. It is possible to subscribe to categories and tags in Discourse, and to have notifications delivered via email. This can be a useful way to follow certain topics without having to have the site be open all the time.

Navigate to the category or tag you want to follow Select “Watching” from the notifications menu Update on what happened across the GNOME project in the week from April 25 to May 02. As part of our volunteer-driven accessibility initiative in GNOME Calendar, and for the first time in the 10+ years of Calendar’s existence, we finally completed and merged the first step needed to have a... This merge request in particular makes the event widgets focusable with navigation keys (arrow left/up/right/down) and activatable with space/enter. Most of GNOME Calendar’s layout and widgets consist of custom widgets and complex calculations, both independently and according to other factors (window size, height and width of each cell, number of events, positioning, etc.),...

This means that these widgets also need to have the necessary accessibility features reimplemented or even rethought, including and starting with the event widgets. Newelle 0.9.5 Released: Internet Access, Improved Document Reading 🔎 Implemented Web Search with SearXNG, DuckDuckGo, and Tavily 🌐 Website Reading: ask questions about websites (Write #url to embed it) 🔢 Improved inline LaTeX support 🗣 New empty chat placeholder 📎 Improved Document... The following are the main channels that you can follow for GNOME news: GNOME’s main social media accounts can be found on Mastodon and Linkedin This Week in GNOME is a weekly blog which summarizes the changes in GNOME over the past 7 days

Planet GNOME combines the blogs of GNOME contributors GNOME’s Discourse is a good source of project news, especially the announcement tag (see the Discourse page for how to subscribe) Powered by Discourse, best viewed with JavaScript enabled What a milestone! We’re thrilled to celebrate the 200th post of This Week in GNOME - that’s nearly four years of showcasing the amazing work, features, and people that make GNOME thrive. From new features, fresh designs, bug fixes but also exciting app launches — TWIG has become a vital pulse of the GNOME community.

Whether you’re a reader, contributor, or part of the community behind the scenes — thank you for being a part of this journey! ❤️ Nearly four years after its launch, I’m delighted to unveil a completely revamped thisweek.gnome.org! Welcome to TWIG 2.0 — featuring a modern technical foundation, a refreshed design, exciting new features, and so much more! Have fun with TWIG 2.0, I’m looking forward to your feedback! Update on what happened across the GNOME project in the week from April 11 to April 18.

The summary blogpost about the 2023/2024 GNOME STF Project that Adrian Vovk and I have been working on for quite a while is finally out! It’s not a quick read but that’s a good thing, there’s so much exciting stuff that was done as part of this over the past year. Shoutout to Sonny Piers, thanks to whom all of this was possible ❤️ https://blogs.gnome.org/tbernard/2025/04/11/gnome-stf-2024

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Update On What Happened Across The GNOME Project In The

Update on what happened across the GNOME project in the week from March 28 to April 04. The low-level core library that forms the basis for projects such as GTK and GNOME. Sam James and Jakub Jelinek fixed a 19-year-old race condition in GClosure in GLib, when they initially thought they were out to fix a gcc optimisation bug! https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/4575 I released Vi...

Identity V25.03 Is Out With A Minor Visual Refresh For

Identity v25.03 is out with a minor visual refresh for GNOME 48: now using a toggle group for the display mode switcher in the main menu. You are seeing this because the administrator of this website has set up Anubis to protect the server against the scourge of AI companies aggressively scraping websites. This can and does cause downtime for the websites, which makes their resources inaccessible ...

Ultimately, This Is A Placeholder Solution So That More Time

Ultimately, this is a placeholder solution so that more time can be spent on fingerprinting and identifying headless browsers (EG: via how they do font rendering) so that the challenge proof of work page... Please note that Anubis requires the use of modern JavaScript features that plugins like JShelter will disable. Please disable JShelter or other such plugins for this domain. Protected by Anubi...

It Is Used For Project Announcements, General Discussions, And Support

It is used for project announcements, general discussions, and support and technical questions. To post or comment to GNOME’s Discourse instance, you need to be logged in. This can be done with an existing Google or Github account. It is also possible to login with a GNOME account. It is possible to subscribe to categories and tags in Discourse, and to have notifications delivered via email. This ...

Navigate To The Category Or Tag You Want To Follow

Navigate to the category or tag you want to follow Select “Watching” from the notifications menu Update on what happened across the GNOME project in the week from April 25 to May 02. As part of our volunteer-driven accessibility initiative in GNOME Calendar, and for the first time in the 10+ years of Calendar’s existence, we finally completed and merged the first step needed to have a... This merg...