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Hi all,

I've had a few instances of people contacting me about the site of xwinman.org

When I mirrored it, I did say as just that -- a mirror of the information, which is found here:

xteddy.org/xwinman/

I've no intention of letting that go.

But, it seems there's a few people who are disputing the legality of these pages. and/or, wishing to clone the content for themselves and "modernise the CSS".

This seems odd to me. and should not happen.

To this end, I've added the mirrored files of xwinman.org here:

codeberg.org/thomasadam/xwinma

... and want anyone to know that these are the official files from the original mirror.

@thomasadam "caterwauling" is howling/wailing/yowling like a cat, when the're… well, when they're cats. So generally an unpleasant noise or sensation.

"Kater" i.e. tomcat is hangover in German, so this is doubling down a bit.

"catcall" is more recent and seems to be exclusively focused on the horny side of cats, I'd say.

Last time I heard the word was from Black Book's Fran Katzenjammer, and of course the Americans have their Katzenjammer Kids.

In praise of

The so-called "stoner rock" era was rife with great bands. I'd perhaps include the more-recent band.

Nonetheless. stood out for me.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyuss

Not knowing any , I've since found out the band were called which I think literally translates as "the cat which moans". Is this correct? :)

Wikipedia suggests a similar translation, but is there some idiomatic term I'm not familiar with here?

My edition of episode 2 has arrived!

unchcrosswords.com

I've only had a quick look through it, but I'm already impressed. There's a good mixture of cryptic crosswords and even a barred crossword.

I'm almost tempted to order a second one so that I have another one which hasn't been scribbled in!

@thomasadam I love how they keep misspelling XFree86 as "X-386". X386 according to Wikipedia lasted about a year, first released in 1991 and became the basis of Xi Graphics' Accelerated-X. XFree86 sprang up from X386 code in 1992 and from what I can see, "replaced" X386.

That project fell apart because of a license change that the developers did not like (my recollection is hazy, but Wikipedia says it happened in 2004 and was because the new license was GPL-incompatible), so X.org forked from the very last commit before said license change, and work carried on from there. XFree86 withered and died.

I digress though…

That thread seems to be showing all the arrogance of the modern UI designers who seem to think being able to differentiate a pushbutton from plain text is old hat. (…and I'm sooo tired of scroll-bar peek-a-boo!) I've tried various Wayland environments on numerous occasions, but there are places where Wayland just isn't ready.

A big contributor to this is the fact that pretty much everything relies on co-operation with the compositor, and all the compositors have their own way of doing things. x11vnc for example just connects to the X server and allows you to expose any X11 desktop you have the credentials for, be it Gnome/KDE or any WM. wayvnc won't work unless you have a wlroots-based desktop (which means not KDE or Gnome).

On-screen keyboard support is a crapshoot too: I have a keyboard-less tablet computer that I have tried various Wayland desktops, and the inability to bring up a fully-featured on-screen keyboard is crippling. Best I've been able to do is a crappy iOS-like OSK with no Control, Alternate or function keys … and punctuation on a separate "layer" so I feel like I'm punching data in via a ITA-2 teletype. Totally buggers my password muscle memory!

Screenreaders I hear have big problems with keybindings… because once again the compositor is in charge of that, and like a "herd" of cats, are going about it their own special way.

This feels a lot like doing DHTML in the early 90s, with a "Netscape" way and a "Microsoft" way of doing things… the answer there was the W3C specifying a "standard" that both parties were held to.

I think Wayland will need to do the same thing, and it is what X was doing. There were a lot of X extensions that are no longer in use, but a good number of them were also implementing features that catered for such edge cases as the ones I mention above.

Sure, the choice of DE is rather sparse at the moment, but that will improve: there weren't a lot of X11 desktop environments in the early 90s either… I seem to recall Gnome and KDE were circa 1997~1998 or so… a good decade after X itself came out.

But not a lot will improve until there is some sort of API standardisation in Wayland, and that is the point people keep missing.

#Wayland #X11

To clarify -- what I mean by this, are the usual zealots of Wayland and/or X11 arguing one way or the other.

I've been very careful when writing about this to highlight why fvwm cannot exist within wayland.

I hope that's come across -- anything else outside of that is bollocks, distracting, and just noise for someone else's gratification.

Show thread

lwn.net/Articles/1053678/

This article was about x11 support, etc., and quickly devolved into something else entirely.

I shouldn't be surprised, but yet again, anyone who is anyone can/does have an opinion, which sucks.

I keep a copy of #fvwm3 source to test or report bugs. After a long while I had update the source today; in CHANGELOG* found:

Buildsystem: deprecating #autotools for #meson/muon #1068 <github.com/fvwmorg/fvwm3/discu> by ThomasAdam @thomasadam c 202410.

#softwareDev #windowManager

Today in the Guardian, it was Pangakupu's turn -- who is also known as Phi in the Independent.

I am not a fan of his style at all, I have to say. However, there's always something to admire from any setter.

This clue:

6dn Information provided in Rhineland city for ‘improver’ of community (10)

The answer is: GENTRIFIER

"Gentrification" is the process of urban change, and hence "Improver of community" is such an example of one who does this.

GEN == "Information -- as in "What's the Gen?"
IF == "Provided. As in "If this is true then we can proceed"
TRIER == "City in Germany", into which we must place "IF".

Hence the answer.

Excellent clue -- oh, and unlike some of the other answers, has nothing to do with Christmas. :)

The popular 225 site:

fifteensquared.net

Which typically blogs the dailies, is now going to start picking off certain crosswords from the up-and-coming mycrossword.co.uk site:

fifteensquared.net/2025/12/17/

I think this will be a nice addition to 225's remit. I hope it works out for them!

I’ve just heard that Andy Emmerson (G8PTH) passed away this morning

A lifelong telephone, radio and TV enthusiast he regularly published articles in wireless and electronics magazines throughout the 70s,80s,90s and 2000s, he also founded the UKs largest telephone collectors group

He sold me my first two plesseyphones!

He was an all round smashing chap who will be greatly missed. Here’s a recording he made in the 70s

m.youtube.com/watch?v=15tsrrjm
and
m.youtube.com/watch?v=p6lAaVVJ

Cheers Andy!

In mid-December, I'm going to the Cheese and Grain to see these beauties:

cheeseandgrain.com/events/the-

I'm especially keen to see Steve Hillage. I've been a fan of his since he was with Gong, but his solo work is just as good if not better. Alas, I doubt I'll get to hear him perform "Salmon Song", but you never know...

The Orb are great (they had a great song with "Fluffy little clouds"), and The Ozric Tentacles have been going so long, they have more albums than I can listen to at this point -- but I own bits-and-pieces.

Looking forward to it!

portable release 3.6

This has now been released.

Some really great stuff in this release. For the nitty-gritty, see:

raw.githubusercontent.com/tmux

For me, there's a myriad of interesting things in there. The big one is pane-scrollbars, as shown in the screenshot attached...

Enjoy!

Hypothetically: if there was a service offering after-market open-hardware sodium-ion batteries for old laptops at a reasonable price, would you be interested in buying them and, if so, how many? I'm talking about old Thinkpads and such. Information about the specific devices would also be useful.

Edit to add: LiFePO4 would almost certainly also be available; there's negligible additional work to support both. Li-Ion is less likely but possible if there's demand.

Edit: I wouldn't normally ask, but since the entire point of this interest is to gauge interest, boosts are definitely welcomed and requested :)

bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cn97nd

Wha the fuck is this? A sock on a strap, it seems, with a price tag of £220.

That's absolutely insane.

I know fashion (which this is by the way, it's not "tech") has a high price-tag but this proves people will pay for anything!

Bizarre.

Also, who the hell is going to be walking around with his thing on them anyway?

Excuse me whilst I go and find my Rolex to put on...

Thanks, glad you like it! It's true, some of these images really do look like they're generated -- and it's even more surreal actually seeing it live, as well as the movement there's a texture to the air that's different from fog or clouds.

The colors weren't static but I wouldn't say they were swirling last night (although there was one other time we saw them were they were defintely dancing).

We've never seen them from our house (we have a lot of trees around so can't see anything low in the sky) ... there's a park that's about a 15-minute drive from here that has fairly good viewing, another one 30-40 minutes away that's even better (because the sky is darker). We find the Glandale app (aurora-alerts.uk/ ) very useful for knowing whether ror not it's worth making the effort -- unlike other apps I know of, it's tuned to our location, and predicts the timing of the substorms when things are likely to be especially good. Of course it's not an exact science, often we don't wind up seeing anything, but when it's good it's really good!

@thomasadam

@thomasadam That's been my go-to multiplexer for years. :flan_smile:

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