🔒
Es gibt neue verfügbare Artikel. Klicken Sie, um die Seite zu aktualisieren.
✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #26.12: GNOME 50 Release, Fedora for Apple, New Ageless Linux, Manjaro Drama and More

Von: Abhishek Prakash

In the previous newsletter, I discussed how various distros are handling the age verification laws. At the end of the article, I speculated that we would see a few existing or new distros coming up with "no age verification" as their unique feature.

Guess what? We have a new distro called Ageless Linux which is created specifically to refuse compliance with OS-level age verification laws.

But it's more than just a distro; the project also maintains a tracker of where various distros and organizations stand on age verification and a $12 RISC-V hardware project aimed at putting non-compliant devices in the hands of schoolchildren. I am glad that it exists.

Here are other highlights of this edition of FOSS Weekly:

  • Things you can do Linux but not on Windows
  • Chrome on ARM Linux (aka Raspberry Pi).
  • A new web browser for Linux users.
  • GNOME 50 and Fedora Ashahi releases
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!

📰 Linux and Open Source News

GNOME 50 is here and X11 is not. Wayland is all the way in this new release. Upcoming distros like Ubuntu 26.04 and Fedora 44 will have it. Rolling distros like Arch should also get it soon.

Google has officially announced Chrome for ARM64 Linux, with a release targeted for Q2 2026. That means Raspberry Pi users, Snapdragon laptop owners, and anyone else running ARM hardware will get the Chrome experience on Linux.

Although, not open source, Kagi's Orion browser has made it to Linux as a public beta, and it's genuinely interesting because it's one of the browsers on the platform not built on Chromium or Firefox's engine. It is based on WebKit and works okayish on GNOME.

A significant chunk of the Manjaro team has gone public with the "Manjaro 2.0 Manifesto," signed by 19 members, calling for the project to separate from its parent company and restructure as a nonprofit.

Fedora Asahi Remix 43 arrives with Mac Pro support. In case you did not know, Asahi is the project bring Linux to Apple's Silicon processors.

AI companies like Anthropic, OpenAI, Meta etc have put $12.5M into Open Source Security, managed by Linux Foundation. This is funny in a way. They are putting together a fund to fix the problem their AI tools created in the first place.

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

Google wants every Android developer to register using their real identity before their apps will install on certified devices, but not everyone's on board.

YOUR support keeps us going, keeps us resisting the established media and tech, keeps us independent. And it costs less than a McDonald's Happy Meal.

Opt for the Plus membership to:

✅ Get 5 FREE eBooks on Linux, Docker and Bash
✅ Enjoy an ad-free reading experience
✅ Flaunt badges in the comment section and forum
✅ To support creation of educational Linux materials

Join It's FOSS Plus

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

A clean beginner's guide to Markdown covering the core syntax: headings, text formatting, links, images, lists, and block quotes. It comes with a downloadable cheat sheet and a few recommendations for online editors if you want to try it without installing anything.

Windows users have been conditioned to ask, "But can Linux do X?" This piece by Roland flips it around and asks what Linux can do that Windows can't. The answers range from practical (live sessions, moving installs between machines, reviving old hardware) to genuinely impressive (swapping kernels, choosing filesystems, replacing every layer of your stack).

📚 eBook bundle on AI

Inside this 20+ eBook library, you’ll gain expert insights from practical lessons like Learn Python Programming, 4E and the LLM Engineer's Handbook. These massively efficient tools save you time and effort so you can prioritize other important tasks and systems.

Your purchase supports the World Central Kitchen organization.

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

If your Raspberry Pi homelab is freezing up under load, the default 200 MB swap is probably the first thing worth looking at.

✨ Apps and Projects Highlights

If your GNOME top panel has turned into a wall of icons, Veil is worth a look. It's a shell extension that lets you hide panel items behind a toggle arrow.

📽️ Videos for You

You could move away from Google today if you wanted to, and DuckDuckGo is one of the good ones to consider.

💡 Quick Handy Tip

In Nautilus file manager, you can press CTRL+F to start a search in the current directory and CTRL+SHIFT+F to search across the other system folders. To go even further, you can add new search locations via the Search settings.

0:00
/0:14

And, if you use the shortcut CTRL+ALT+O after selecting a file or folder, you can go to it's location in the file manager. Do note that this works in the Search and Recent pages of the file manager.

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

Do you know the brain behind Debian? This Ian Murdock quiz will test your knowledge.

🤣 Meme of the Week: We must protect it at all costs!

man page meme

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On March 17, 1988, Apple sued Microsoft for copyright infringement over the look and feel of the Windows GUI. Apple's argument was that Windows borrowed too heavily from the Macintosh interface it had debuted in 1984. The case dragged on for years before a judge ruled that Apple had only limited rights to the design elements in question.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: One of our regular Pro FOSSers is having an issue with CUPS on antiX Linux; can you help?

FOSS Weekly #26.12: GNOME 50 Release, Fedora for Apple, New Ageless Linux, Manjaro Drama and More

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #26.11: SUSE for Sale, Firefox Redesign, New-ish Terminal, i3 Customization and More

Von: Abhishek Prakash

If rumors and Reuters are to be believed, SUSE Linux us up for sale again. Again because it has changed owners several times in the past. IBM bought Red Hat Linux for $34 billion 6 years ago. It would be interesting to see who grabs SUSE. I hope it's not Microsoft.

By the way, not seeing new articles from It's FOSS in your feed reader? That's because there is an ongoing issue with the RSS feed as I am migrating to FeedPress. Please bear it with me.

Here are other highlights of this edition of FOSS Weekly:

  • EA slowly moving towards Linux.
  • Firefox's redesign has been leaked.
  • Linux Mint keyboard shortcut video.
  • MidnightBSD saying no to age verification.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!

📰 Linux and Open Source News

EA is hiring an anti-cheat engineer to bring Javelin to ARM64, and tucked into the job listing is a mention of exploring Linux and Proton support in the future. After ditching Linux for Apex Legends in 2024, it's a surprising turn. But I wouldn't hold my breath on this.

Firefox's Proton UI has been around since 2021 and honestly looks it. Leaked internal mockups show Mozilla is working on something called "Nova," a significant visual overhaul. Tabs, the address bar, and the toolbar are merged into a single floating strip; rounded corners are everywhere; flat grays are out in favor of gradients, and the private window gets a full dark-purple makeover.

MidnightBSD has updated its license to bar residents of Brazil and California from using the project, with Colorado, Illinois, and New York on the list if their respective pending age verification bills pass.

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

The age verification laws spreading across US states are making distro maintainers uncomfortable, and responses are all over the place. Ubuntu and Fedora are working on minimal local APIs to tick the compliance box without doing anything too invasive. MidnightBSD is outright banning people from using it (as mentioned above).

YOUR support keeps us going, keeps us resisting the established media and tech, keeps us independent. And it costs less than a McDonald's Happy Meal.

Opt for the Plus membership to:

✅ Get 5 FREE eBooks on Linux, Docker and Bash
✅ Enjoy an ad-free reading experience
✅ Flaunt badges in the comment section and forum
✅ To support creation of educational Linux materials

Join It's FOSS Plus

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

Wordcloud is a Python tool that turns any list of words into a visual word cloud image, right from the terminal. You can feed it a text file, tweak the resolution, swap the font, change the background color, or use a mask image to shape the output around a custom silhouette.

Some practical privacy tips that don't require a computer science degree or a paranoia spiral. Our article covers the basics well, from securing your email and browser to picking better cloud storage and messaging apps.

Ever wanted a desktop that looks like it belongs on r/unixporn? We have an i3 customization guide that covers a lot, from basic keybindings and color schemes to transparent status bars and per-workspace app assignments.

GSConnect is the GNOME-friendly way to link your Android phone and Linux machine, built on top of KDE Connect. Once paired, you can transfer files, share the clipboard, get phone notifications on your desktop, and use your phone as a remote mouse.

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

Prefer your local AI neatly containerized? This guide shows how to get Ollama running in Docker.

✨ Apps and Projects Highlights

FRANK OS is a full desktop operating system, complete with a Start menu, overlapping windows, Alt+Tab switching, and a ZX Spectrum emulator, running on an RP2350 microcontroller.

Foot is a minimal Wayland-native terminal emulator that focuses on speed and simplicity. A hidden gem worth exploring.

Keith Curtis spent a week building what he calls "Cursor for LibreOffice," an AI extension that lives in a sidebar and actually edits your documents.

Building Cursor for LibreOffice: A Week-Long Journey

📽️ Videos for You

Sharing some of the essential keyboard shortcuts for Linux Mint, this time in video format.

💡 Quick Handy Tip

On GNOME, first install Tiling Shell. Then, when you right-click on the titlebar of a window, you get various tiling options. Do keep in mind that not all apps will support this.

gnome tiling shell extension window tiling

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

Match Linux apps with their functions in this puzzle. And yes, fresh new puzzles are coming soon 😄

🤣 Meme of the Week: Winslop doesn't know what consent means.

linux and windows update comparision meme

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On March 9, 1955, a program called "Director" was demonstrated on MIT's Whirlwind computer—automatically managing system resources while user code ran. It's considered one of the earliest rudimentary operating systems ever created.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: Can you help one of our regular FOSSers decide whether to keep Secure Boot enabled or not?

FOSS Weekly #26.11: SUSE for Sale, Firefox Redesign, New-ish Terminal, i3 Customization and More

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #26.10: Age Verification in Linux, systemd Troubleshooting Tools, Graphene Phone, Longer Linux LTS Kernels and More

Von: Abhishek Prakash

U.S. states keep passing age-verification laws that sound reasonable until you read the fine print. Colorado, for example, wants operating systems to broadcast age data to every app you install, and California has already passed a similar bill.

As governments push age checks deeper into apps and operating systems, what once sounded like a safety measure is starting to feel a lot like surveillance.

And it’s not just happening in the U.S. Reports suggest Brazil is also moving toward similar regulations. While this model may fit ecosystems like Apple and Microsoft, where operating systems are tightly tied to online accounts, the Linux world works very differently. Yet developers from projects like Fedora and Ubuntu are already discussing how such requirements might affect Linux.

We’ll be keeping close eye on how this evolves. Stay tuned.

Here are other highlights of this edition of FOSS Weekly:

  • Longer support for certain Linux kernels.
  • systemd troubleshooting tools
  • Xfce customization.
  • Microsoft hates Microslop.
  • LibreOffice quick tip.
  • A new consortium to unify the Arm software ecosystem.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!
SPONSORED

AI coding assistants write code fast but do they pick safe dependencies? This is where Sonatype Guide comes in. It connects tools like Cursor, Copilot, and Claude Code to real-time open source intelligence via MCP, so vulnerable packages get flagged before they land in the open source project. Try it here.

Try it here

📰 Linux and Open Source News

The web's most popular UI library has outgrown Meta's ownership. React is now part of the Linux Foundation with neutral governance and eight platinum members on board. Technical decisions are independent from the board, of course.

Arm software got too complex for any one company to handle alone. CoreCollective just launched to fix that fragmentation problem. Free membership for anyone building on Arm. AMD, Google, Microsoft and Red Hat are already in.

LTS kernel support windows just got extended after being cut to two years back in 2023. Linux 6.6 and 6.12 now get four-years of support instead. Greg Kroah-Hartman updated the schedule after discussions with companies and maintainers.

AI's RAM appetite just killed another hardware project. Orange Pi and Manjaro spent two years building a Linux gaming handheld, cleared regulatory approvals, and got everything ready to ship. Now it's sitting on ice because DDR5 chip prices are absurd.

Motorola just partnered with the GrapheneOS Foundation, and it was announced at MWC 2026. The two plan to collaborate on research, software improvements, and new security features in the coming months. If you did not know already, Graphene is an Android distribution that ditches Google's data collection layer entirely and has long been the go-to for anyone serious about privacy.

And a funny thing happened this week when Microsoft locked down its Discord server because people kept on calling it Microslop.

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

Few Linux distributions attract as much criticism as Ubuntu. From Snap complaints to Canonical decisions, the internet seems to have a long list of reasons to dislike it. But Ubuntu may not deserve nearly as much hate as it gets.

AI may not need your attention, but us humans do. YOUR support keeps us going. And it costs less than a McDonald's Happy Meal.

Opt for the Plus membership to:

✅ Get 5 FREE eBooks on Linux, Docker and Bash
✅ Enjoy an ad-free reading experience
✅ Flaunt badges in the comment section and forum
✅ To support creation of educational Linux materials

Join It's FOSS Plus

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

When stuff breaks on Linux, systemd already knows what happened. Systemctl shows which services crashed, journalctl has the error messages, and systemd-analyze tells you what's hogging boot time. Coredumpctl keeps snapshots of apps that died completely.

Got an old PC or Raspberry Pi collecting dust? Batocera, Lakka, and RetroPie turn them into plug-and-play retro consoles via USB or SD card.

A quick tip if you love to use LibreOffice. If a document has way too many images and you have to save multiple or all images from it, save it as an HTML document in a new folder. You'll get all the images from the document. Pretty neat 😄

By the way, we are working on a "Linux Mint Starter Pack" series for beginners. I'll share with you when it is done. In the mean time, you can get familiar with the Linux command line.

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

Tired of feeding your photos to Google's AI? PhotoPrism runs locally on Docker, handles face recognition and tagging on your hardware.

✨ Apps and Projects Highlights

A Czech-based dev built a data center sim where you rack servers and run cables. No native Linux support but works with some FPS issues

📽️ Videos for You

Xfce can be customized to look (more) beautiful. This video shows how:

💡 Quick Handy Tip

Brave browser allows you to set a shortcut to copy the URL of the current tab. For this, go to Brave Settings -> System -> Shortcuts. Here, search for Copy URL and add a keybind to it.

brave browser copy url shortcut

In the screenshot above, CTRL+SHIFT+C is added as the shortcut. This overwrites the default inspect function, which it was mapped to earlier. So tread with caution and try to add a non-conflicting shortcut.

If your browser does not support this, you can use CTRL+L to access the address bar and then CTRL+C to copy the URL of the current tab.

📚 Don't Miss! Linux eBook bundle

Humble Bundle has brought back the "Linux for Seasoned Admins" ebook bundle offer (partner link). From the classic Linux Pocket Guide and my favorite, Efficient Linux at the Command Line, the bundle also has ebooks on Docker, Ansible, Kubernetes and other devops aspects of Linux.

And your purchase also supports the Code for America initiative.

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

Can you beat this crossword and become the Daemon Hunter?

🤣 Meme of the Week: The pain is real. 🥲

arch gentoo meme

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On March 1, 1960, the first LISP Programmer's Manual was released by John McCarthy's group at MIT. McCarthy had built a recursive, symbolic language that would go on to become the foundation of AI programming and outlast nearly every other high-level language of its era.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: FOSSers are talking about the upcoming secure boot changes, and how it might affect those on Linux.

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #26.09: Linux Mint Shortcuts, OpenClaw Alternatives, Ladybird's Rust Move, Super Productivity and More

Von: Abhishek Prakash

I know not everyone wants to hear about AI all the time. But at this point, it’s impossible to ignore what’s happening.

It has been just a year since Anthropic launched Claude Code and the impact has been staggering.

In recent months, engineers at Anthropic reportedly stopped writing code manually for large parts of their workflow. Instead, they’ve been shipping feature after feature with AI-assisted development. The velocity is unlike anything we’ve seen before.

And the market noticed. Claude’s latest model release this month reportedly wiped out trillions of dollars from IT stocks globally within a single week.

Then came another shock.

A week later, Anthropic published a blog post claiming its AI can now modernize legacy COBOL codebases. IBM’s stock dropped 16% in a single day. Why? Because IBM still generates significant revenue maintaining mainframe systems that power banks, airlines, and critical financial infrastructure.

And don’t assume this only affects programmers. This shift touches all of us.

A recent research paper showed that tools like Claude and ChatGPT can de-anonymize your anonymous online identity with surprising ease.

The barrier to uncovering digital identities is collapsing. AI isn’t just changing how code is written. It’s changing privacy, security, and the economics of entire industries.

But here’s the important part.

Every major computing shift felt destabilizing at first; from assembly to high-level languages, from physical servers to the cloud. We’re witnessing the beginning of a new era. And we’re still early.

Here's the highlight of this edition of FOSS Weekly:

  • Red Hat open-sourcing a tool.
  • Some dock options for your system.
  • Lightweight OpenClaw alternatives.
  • New KDE Plasma release with many upgrades.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!

Humble Bundle has brought back the "Linux for Seasoned Admins" ebook bundle offer (partner link). From the classic Linux Pocket Guide and my favorite, Efficient Linux at the Command Line, the bundle also has ebooks on Docker, Ansible, Kubernetes and other devops aspects of Linux.

And your purchase also supports the Code for America initiative.

📰 Linux and Open Source News

Here's a summary of the news this week.

Red Hat has open-sourced a digital sovereignty assessment tool under the Apache 2.0 license. It asks 21 questions across 7 domains and scores organizations on a four-level maturity scale.

KDE Plasma 6.6 just landed with some practical upgrades. Spectacle now does OCR so you can pull text straight from screenshots, there's a new setup wizard for fresh installs, and WiFi QR code scanning works if you've got a camera.

Colorado's pushing a bill that would force operating system makers to ask users their age at setup, then share that info with every app they install. The bill never explains how age gets verified. Anyone could just lie.

Independent web browser Ladybird just ported 25,000 lines of its JavaScript engine from C++ to Rust in two weeks using Claude Code and Codex AI. The code passed 52,000+ tests with zero failures.

Australia's cyber agency recently open-sourced Azul, a malware analysis platform for incident responders. It stores samples indefinitely, automates reverse engineering with reusable plugins, and clusters patterns across malware families.

ONLYOFFICE's latest desktop editor release brings improvements to its PDF editing capabilities among other things.

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

App stores work great until you need real package control. This opinion piece by Roland argues Linux needs a modern Synaptic replacement for power users, but built with the Wayland security model in mind instead of running everything as root.

AI may not need your attention, but us humans do. YOUR support keeps us going. And it costs less than a McDonald's Happy Meal.

Opt for the Plus membership to:

✅ Get 5 FREE eBooks on Linux, Docker and Bash
✅ Enjoy an ad-free reading experience
✅ Flaunt badges in the comment section and forum
✅ To support creation of educational Linux materials

Join It's FOSS Plus

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

Our comprehensive guide to keyboard shortcuts in Linux Mint covers everything from basics like Super for the start menu and Ctrl+Alt+T for the terminal to workspace management, window tiling, screenshots, and session control.

Looking to replace your Linux desktop's default dock? We covered seven options ranging from lightweight Plank to the heavily customizable Latte and the old-school Cairo. Also includes a window manager-friendly pick like Tint2.

Linux distros are switching to Wayland by default, but legacy apps still need Xorg, so knowing which display server you're running matters when troubleshooting. A quick terminal command reveals whether you're on Wayland or X11.

echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

OpenClaw's memory hunger kills it on Raspberry Pi and cheap SBCs. Here are some projects that remedy it by building an AI agent architecture for constrained hardware.

✨ Apps and Projects Highlights

To-do apps usually mine your data for ads. Super Productivity doesn't collect anything, just asks for notification access. It also offers Jira sync, Pomodoro timers, and time tracking.

📽️ Videos for You

In the llatest video, I share how I clean up systemd logs on my Linux systems, both desktop and servers.

💡 Quick Handy Tip

In Linux Mint (Cinnamon desktop), you can right-click the title of a window and enable "Always on Top" and "Always on Visible Workspace". This ensures that the currently open window stays on your current workspace, and will be above every other app window.

You will also find this on other modern desktop environments like KDE Plasma and GNOME as well.

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

Can you correctly guess these legendary open source projects?

🤣 Meme of the Week: Oh, how the times change. From Arch Linux to Debian.

linux meme on bleeding edge vs stability

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On February 25, 1959, MIT and the U.S. Air Force debuted APT (Automatically Programmed Tool) (I know you thought about the Linux one). It was the world’s first "English-like" programming language for machinery, effectively birthing Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAM).

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: The Apache Software Foundation is looking for people to present at Community Over Code 2026 in Glasgow. Are you up for it?

If that's not your cup of tea, why not talk with a fellow FOSSer about their kernel panic issue.

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #26.06: Bash Manual in Epstein Files, Linux after Linus, Nano like Editors, France Takes on Big Tech and More

Von: Abhishek Prakash


Your weekly assortment of FOSS news, Linux tips and open source tools.

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #26.02: Level Up in 2026, Liquorix Kernel, Open Source Apps from Web Browser and More

Von: Abhishek Prakash


Keep on learning in, keep on Linux-ing. 2026 is your year of Linux.

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

Von: Abhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

It's Halloween so time to talk spooky stuff 👻

If solving Linux mysteries sounds thrilling, SadServers will be your new haunted playground. I came across this online platform that gives you real, misconfigured servers to fix and real-world inspired situations to deal with. This is perfect for sharpening your troubleshooting skills, specially in the Halloween season 🎃

What LeetCode? I Found This Platform to Practice Linux Troubleshooting Skills
Move over theory and practice your Linux and DevOps skills by solving various challenges on this innovative platform. A good way to prepare for job interviews.
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for LinuxIt's FOSS NewsAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

💬 Let's see what else you get in this edition:

  • A new KDE Plasma and Fedora 43 release.
  • An Austrian ministry kicking out Microsoft.
  • Ubuntu 25.10 users encountering another bug.
  • App that gives you Pomodoro with task management.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!
  • This edition of FOSS Weekly is supported by Proton Mail.
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

Ghosts aren’t the only ones watching 👀 — Big Tech is too. Protect your inbox from creepy trackers and invisible eyes with Proton Mail, the privacy-first, end-to-end encrypted email trusted by millions. Make the switch today and exorcize your inbox demons. 🕸️💌

Switch to Proton Mail

📰 Linux and Open Source News

Fedora 43 is Out with Wayland-Only Desktop, GNOME 49, and Linux 6.17
RPM 6.0 security upgrades, X11 removal from Workstation, and many other changes.
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for LinuxIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

Austria's BMWET has moved away from Microsoft in a well-organized migration to Nextcloud.

Good News! Austrian Ministry Kicks Out Microsoft in Favor of Nextcloud
The BMWET migrates 1,200 employees to sovereign cloud in just four months.
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for LinuxIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

Ghostty is loaded with functionality; join me as I explore some of them.

Forks happen when freedom matters more than control.

Community Strikes Back: 12 Open Source Projects Born from Resistance
From BSL license changes to abandoned codebases, see how the open source community struck back with powerful forks and fresh alternatives.
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for LinuxIt's FOSSPulkit Chandak
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

Don't forget to utilize templates feature in LibreOffice and save some time.

Comparing two of the best open source but mainstream password managers.

Bitwarden vs. Proton Pass: What’s The Best Password Manager?
What is your favorite open-source password manager?
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for LinuxIt's FOSSAnkush Das
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

Discover what’s next for tinkerers in the post-Qualcomm world.

Arduino Alternative Microcontroller Boards for Your DIY Projects in the Post-Qualcomm Era
If Arduino being acquired puts a bad taste in your mouth, or even if you just want to explore what the alternatives offer, this article is for you.
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for LinuxIt's FOSSPulkit Chandak
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

TerraMaster has launched two flagship-class hybrid NAS devices that pack a punch.

🛍️ Deals You Should Not Miss

The 16-book library also includes just-released editions of The Official Raspberry Pi Handbook 2026, Book of Making 2026, and much more! Whether you’re just getting into coding or want to deepen your knowledge about something more specific, this pay-what-you-want bundle has everything you need. And you support Raspberry Pi Foundation North America with your purchase!

Humble Tech Book Bundle: All Things Raspberry Pi by Raspberry Pi Press
Learn the ins and outs of computer coding with this library from Raspberry Pi! Pay what you want and support the charity of your choice!
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for LinuxHumble Bundle
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

✨ Project Highlights

An in-depth look at a super cool Pomodoro app for Linux.

Pomodoro With Super Powers: This Linux App Will Boost Your Productivity
Pomodoro combined with task management and website blocking. This is an excellent tool for productivity seekers but there are some quirks worth noticing.
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for LinuxIt's FOSSRoland Taylor
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

📽️ Videos I Am Creating for You

Giving a dark, menacing but fun Halloween makeover to my Arch Linux system.

Linux is the most used operating system in the world. but on servers. Linux on desktop is often ignored. That's why It's FOSS made it a mission to write helpful tutorials and guides to help use Linux on their personal computer.

We do it all for free. No venture capitalist funds us. But you know who does? Readers like you. Yes, we are an independent, reader supported publication helping Linux users worldwide with timely news coverage, in-depth guides and tutorials.

If you believe in our work, please support us by getting a Plus membership. It costs just $3 a month or $99 for a lifetime subscription.

Join It's FOSS Plus

💡 Quick Handy Tip

In GNOME desktop, you can use the ArcMenu extension for a heavily customizable panel app menu. For instance, you can get 20+ menu layouts by going to Menu → Menu Layout → Pick a layout of your choice.

FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

We have got a spooky crossword this time around. Can you identify all the FOSS ghosts?

Ghosts of Open Source [Halloween Special Crossword]
A spooky crossword challenge for true FOSS enthusiasts!
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for LinuxIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

Actually, there is a whole bunch of Halloween themed puzzles and quizzes for you to enjoy 😄🎃

🤣 Meme of the Week: Yeah, my Windows partition feels left out.

FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On October 30, 2000, the last Multics system was shut down at the Canadian Department of National Defence in Halifax. Multics was a groundbreaking time-sharing operating system that inspired Unix and introduced ideas like hierarchical file systems, dynamic linking, and security rings that shaped modern computing.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: Pro FOSSer Neville has shared a fascinating take on arithmetic.

Arithmetic and our Sharing Culture
We al learn to do division “If there are 6 cakes and 3 children, how many cakes does each child get” Division is about sharing But it does not always work “It there are 2 sharks and 8 people in a pool, how many people does each shark get?” Division can not answer that question. Because that example is not about sharing , it is about competition Whether division works depends on what are called the “Rules of Engagement” We all learnt to multiply “If 10 children each bring 2 apples, how m…
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for LinuxIt's FOSS Communitynevj
FOSS Weekly #25.44: KDE Plasma 6.5 and Fedora 43 Released, Ghostty Terminal, Nextcloud Over Microsoft and Productivity App for Linux

❤️ With love

Please share it with your Linux-using friends and encourage them to subscribe (hint: it's here).

Share the articles in Linux Subreddits and community forums.

Follow us on Google News and stay updated in your News feed.

Opt for It's FOSS Plus membership and support us 🙏

Enjoy FOSS 😄

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

Von: Abhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

Linux Mint Debian Edition (LMDE) version 7 is available now. For people who like Debian more than Ubuntu and Linux Mint's Cinnamon more than anything, this is the perfect choice.

LMDE 7 “Gigi” Released: Linux Mint’s Debian-Based Alternative Gets Major Upgrade
A stable Debian base meets a polished Linux Mint desktop experience.
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

Sometimes I wonder if LMDE should be the default choice for Linux Mint. Am I the only one who thinks this?

💬 Let's see what you get in this edition:

  • Me pitching Proton Mail against Gmail.
  • A new LMDE release based on Debian 13.
  • DIY kindle alternatives.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!
  • This edition of FOSS Weekly is supported by PrepperDisk.
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

PrepperDisk gives you a fully offline, private copy of the world’s most useful open-source knowledge—so your access doesn’t depend on big platforms, networks, or gatekeepers.

Built on Raspberry Pi, it bundles projects like Wikipedia, maps, and survival manuals with tools we’ve built and open-sourced ourselves. It’s a way to safeguard information freedom: your own secure, personal archive of open knowledge, ready anywhere—even without the internet.

Explore PrepperDisk

📰 Linux and Open Source News

LMDE 7 “Gigi” Released: Linux Mint’s Debian-Based Alternative Gets Major Upgrade
A stable Debian base meets a polished Linux Mint desktop experience.
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

Proton Mail is a better choice than Gmail. That's what I think. And I discovered a ProtonMail feature that works better than Gmail.

That One (of the several) Feature ProtonMail Does Better Than Gmail
The newsletters can be a mess to manage. ProtonMail gives you better features than Gmail to manage your newsletter subscriptions.
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsAbhishek
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

GNOME all the way

I thought of sharing some neat tips and tweaks that relate to various components of the GNOME desktop environment. Basically, they let you discover some lesser known features and customization. Perhaps you'll discover your next favorite trick here.

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

For AI enthusiasts, here is a way to go from zero keys to full AI integration in one step. The Puter.js library allows integrating mainstream AI in your web projects without needing their API keys.

I Used This Open Source Library to Integrate OpenAI, Claude, Gemini to Websites Without API Keys
This underrated open source JavaScript library lets you integrate popular commercial LLMs without needing their paid API. You can test it out within minutes on your Linux system with this tutorial.
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSBhuwan Mishra
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

Also, if you are fed up with Amazon's Kindle, then you can build your own eBook reader.

Looking for Open Source Kindle Alternatives? Build it Yourself
There are no easy options. You have to take the matter in your hand, quite literally.
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSPulkit Chandak
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

The FSF is going all in with the Librephone project.

🛍️ Deal Alert: Raspberry Pi eBook Bundle

Learn the ins and outs of coding your favorite retro games and build one of your own with Code the Classics Volume II. Give your tech-savvy kids a head start in computer coding with Unplugged Tots.

The 16-book library also includes just-released editions of The Official Raspberry Pi Handbook 2026, Book of Making 2026, and much more! Whether you’re just getting into coding or want to deepen your knowledge about something more specific, this pay-what-you-want bundle has everything you need. And you support Raspberry Pi Foundation North America with your purchase!

Humble Tech Book Bundle: All Things Raspberry Pi by Raspberry Pi Press
Learn the ins and outs of computer coding with this library from Raspberry Pi! Pay what you want and support the charity of your choice!
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux StuffHumble Bundle
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

✨ Project Highlights

NebiOS is a beautiful approach to how an Ubuntu-based distro with a custom desktop environment can be built.

NebiOS is an Ubuntu-based Distro With a Brand New DE Written for Wayland from Ground Up
Exploring a new Ubuntu-based distro. By the way, it’s been some time since we had a new distro based on Ubuntu.
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

COSMIC is shaping up well, we tested it to see how it performs.

I Tested Pop!_OS 24.04 LTS Beta: A Few Hits and Misses But Mostly on the Right Track
COSMIC has come a long way, but is it enough?
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

📽️ Videos I Am Creating for You

The terminal makeover video is nearly at 100K views. With so many people enhancing the looks of their terminal, I thought you might want to give it a try, too.

Linux is the most used operating system in the world. but on servers. Linux on desktop is often ignored. That's why It's FOSS made it a mission to write helpful tutorials and guides to help use Linux on their personal computer.

We do it all for free. No venture capitalist funds us. But you know who does? Readers like you. Yes, we are an independent, reader supported publication helping Linux users worldwide with timely news coverage, in-depth guides and tutorials.

If you believe in our work, please support us by getting a Plus membership. It costs just $3 a month or $99 for a lifetime subscription.

Join It's FOSS Plus

💡 Quick Handy Tip

Too much GNOME in this newsletter? Let's switch to KDE.

If you are using desktop widgets in KDE Plasma and don't know how to add the system monitor sensor to it, then do this. Open the System Monitor app and right-click on any telemetry you want to add. Then select "Add chart as Desktop Widget".

FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

That's it. The selected chart will be added to your desktop. You can change its appearance by going to Edit mode later.

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

This crossword-style challenge mixes up popular Linux text editors. From timeless command-line classics to sleek modern tools. Sharpen your brain, embrace your inner geek, and see how many you can decode!

The Scrambled Linux Editors Crossword
Think you know your Linux text editors? From Vim to Nano, these jumbled names will challenge even seasoned coders. Try to unscramble them and see how many you can get right!
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

🤣 Meme of the Week: Probably not true anymore but still funny.

FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On October 20, 2004, Ubuntu 4.10 "Warty Warthog" was released! Backed by Mark Shuttleworth’s Canonical, Ubuntu aimed to make Linux simple and human-friendly, its name loosely translates to "humanity." Two decades later, it’s dominating the Linux desktop space.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: Long-time FOSSer Cliff is looking for help with a Realtek Wi-Fi issue on his MX Linux system. Can you help?

MX Linux Realtek Wi-fi Issues
I have MX Linux KDE, most recent update. It runs on kernel 6.1.0-40. I am using a mini pc with a Realtek 8852BE network card. I had always had wired internet for that machine, but now I have to be happy with wifi. The problem, unlike any of my other OSs, is that it sees each wifi channel as having a 0 signal strength and fails to activate wlan0. I went around for hours with Claude AI to solve it and it was unable to resolve the issue. It finally suggested just going to MX Tools, Package Install…
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS Communitycliffsloane
FOSS Weekly #25.43: NebiOS Linux, GNOME Enhancements, LMDE 7, COSMIC Beta Review and More Linux Stuff

❤️ With love

Please share it with your Linux-using friends and encourage them to subscribe (hint: it's here).

Share the articles in Linux Subreddits and community forums.

Follow us on Google News and stay updated in your News feed.

Opt for It's FOSS Plus membership and support us 🙏

Enjoy FOSS 😄

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

Von: Abhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

In the previous newsletter, I asked what kind of advice someone looking to switch from Windows to Linux would have. I got so many responses that I am still replying to all the suggestions.

I am also working on the 'Windows to Linux migration' page. Hopefully, we will have that up by next week.

Hope to see more people coming to Linux as Windows 10 support has ended now.

💬 Let's see what you get in this edition:

  • Mastering alias command.
  • A bug that broke Flatpaks on Ubuntu 25.10.
  • Controversy over Framework supporting Hyprland project.
  • New Flatpak software center.
  • Open source game development arriving on iPhone.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!

📰 Linux and Open Source News

Framework has found itself in a controversy over its recent endorsements of Hyprland project.

Framework is Accused of Supporting the Far-right, Apparently for Sponsoring the Hyprland Project
The announcement has generated quite some buzz but for all the wrong reasons.
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

Telegram banned our community group without reasons. It's a deja vu moment, as Facebook was also banning links to Linux websites some months ago.

Telegram, Please Learn Who’s a Threat and Who’s Not
Our Telegram community got deleted without an explanation.
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

Proprietary ecosystems are great at keeping creative people locked in, but you can break free with the power of FOSS.

5 Signs Your Proprietary Workflow Is Stifling Your Creativity (And What You Can Do About It)
If these signs feel familiar, your creativity may be stifled by proprietary constraints.
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsTheena Kumaragurunathan
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

Getting Started With Manjaro
This is a collection of tutorials that are useful for new Manjaro users.
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

We have a Pironman alternative for you that saves your wallet and desk space.

The Affordable Pironman Alternative Mini PC Case for Raspberry Pi 5
We have a new option in tower cases for Raspberry Pi 5. This one has a lower price tag but does that make it worth a purchase?
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

Ubo Pod is an open source AI assistant that works for you, not for your data. It is based on Raspberry Pi.

Bhuwan tried them all but llama.cpp finally nailed the local LLM experience.

I have been using Keychron mechanical keyboard for two years now. I recently came across their upcoming product that has ceramic mechanical keyboards. Interesting materials choice, right?

FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

🎫 Event Alert: First Ever UbuCon in India

The Ubuntu India LoCo is hosting the first ever UbuCon event in India, and we are the official media partners for it!

India’s First UbuCon Set to Unite Ubuntu Community in Bengaluru This November
India gets its first UbuCon!
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

Proprietary ecosystems are great at keeping creative people locked in, but

✨ Project Highlights

Bazaar is getting all the hype right now; it is a neat app store for GNOME that focuses on providing applications and add-ons from Flatpak remotes, particularly Flathub.

GitHub - kolunmi/bazaar: New App Store for GNOME
New App Store for GNOME. Contribute to kolunmi/bazaar development by creating an account on GitHub.
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux StuffGitHubkolunmi
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

A new, open source personal finance application.

John Schneiderman’s - DRN
An application to manage your personal finances using a budget.
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux StuffDRNJohn Schneiderman

📽️ Videos I Am Creating for You

Your Linux Mint setup deserves a stunning makeover!

Desktop Linux is mostly neglected by the industry but loved by the community. For the past 13 years, It's FOSS has been helping people use Linux on their personal computers. And we are now facing the existential threat from AI models stealing our content.

If you like what we do and would love to support our work, please become It's FOSS Plus member. It costs $24 a year (less than the cost of a McDonald's burger a month), and you get an ad-free reading experience with the satisfaction of helping the desktop Linux community.

Join It's FOSS Plus

💡 Quick Handy Tip

In KDE Plasma, open settings and go into Colors & Themes → Window Decorations → Configure Titlebar.

Here, add the "On all desktops" and "Keep above other windows" options to the title bar by dragging and dropping. Click on "Apply" to confirm the changes.

FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

Now, you can use:

  • The On all desktops button to pin an app to all your desktops.
  • The Keep above other windows button to keep a selected window always on top.

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

Can memory match terminal shortcuts with their actions?

Memory Match Terminal Shortcuts With Their Actions
An enjoyable way to test your memory by matching the Linux terminal shortcuts with their respective actions.
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

🤣 Meme of the Week: Windows 10 will be missed by many, but there are much better Linux choices to replace it with.

FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On October 16, 1959, Control Data Corporation introduced the CDC 1604, one of the first fully transistorized computers. It was designed by Seymour Cray, who later became known as the father of supercomputing. The CDC 1604 was among the fastest machines of its time and was used for scientific research, weapons control, and commercial data processing.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: Windows 10 has reached end of life, and our FOSSers are discussing the event.

Windows 10 reaches EOL tomorrow!
Hi everybody, it’s that time again, that happens approx. every 10 or so years: A Windows version is reaching its end of life. I was doing some research and asked Brave Search about it. And the facts said that Windows 10 has 47% of overall Windows market share, which is roughly 35% of the overall share. Let’s just hope that they will do the right thing and switch to Linux. I wanted to know: what are others opinions on this? Do you know somebody who migrated from Windows?
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux StuffIt's FOSS CommunityGeorge1
FOSS Weekly #25.42: Hyprland Controversy, German State with Open Source, New Flatpak App Center and a Lot More Linux Stuff

❤️ With love

Please share it with your Linux-using friends and encourage them to subscribe (hint: it's here).

Share the articles in Linux Subreddits and community forums.

Follow us on Google News and stay updated in your News feed.

Opt for It's FOSS Plus membership and support us 🙏

Enjoy FOSS 😄

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

Von: Abhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

Microsoft is all set to kill existing methods to set up a local account on fresh Windows 11 installs. I am not really surprised. This is Microsoft being Microsoft.

Microsoft Kills Windows 11 Local Account Setup Just as Windows 10 Reaches End of Life
Local account workarounds removed just before Windows 10 goes dark.
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

And this comes just days before Windows 10 support is scheduled to end. And that is a pivotal moment for us desktop Linux users. I have seen an influx of people migrating to Linux when Windows XP and 7 support ended. Some of those went back to Windows with newer systems, whereas some became lifelong Linux users.

We are reorganizing and also creating new guides to make the Windows 10 to Linux migration smooth for new users. Please provide your suggestions on what difficulties a new user may face when they switch to Linux and what kind of questions that might have about switching to Linux. Let's work to a broader Linux userbase 💪

💬 Let's see what you get in this edition:

  • A new openSUSE Leap release.
  • Codes of Conduct being called a disaster.
  • Linus being unhappy with some Rust code.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!

📰 Linux and Open Source News

By the way, Ubuntu 25.10 will be releasing today. Do check out the new features it is getting.

Ubuntu 25.10: Release Date and New Features in Questing Quokka
Take a look at the new features and changes you’ll see in the upcoming Ubuntu 25.10 release.
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

Open Source legend, Eric S. Raymond, says Codes of Conduct are a disaster.

The Man Who Started Open Source Initiative Advocates for Abolishing Codes of Conduct
Between Anarchy and Bureaucracy: The Code of Conduct Debate Ignited by Eric Raymond.
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

You can balance cost and effort if you go the FOSS way as a creative.

Beyond Free: The Value Proposition of Open Source for Creatives
FOSS is free as in cost, but not free as in effort. The loss of convenience is real, especially at the start. But for creatives who are willing to invest, the long-term rewards—flexibility, control, and a workflow built to last—are more than worth the price.
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsTheena Kumaragurunathan
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

Speaking of Obsidian and Markdown editors, the popular open source notes software Joplin can be made more effective with these tips.

Mastering Joplin Notes: Tips and Tweaks
Joplin is an awesome open source note taking application. Here’s how you can make the best of it.
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSSreenath
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

IBM has launched Granite 4.0, their hybrid AI model that beats rivals twice its size.

IBM Unveils Granite 4.0 Hybrid Model That Competes with Rivals Twice Its Size
These models sure pack a punch.
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

✨ Project Highlights

telekasten.nvim is a Neovim Lua plugin that lets you manage a markdown-based zettelkasten/wiki + journal inside Neovim.

GitHub - nvim-telekasten/telekasten.nvim: A Neovim (lua) plugin for working with a markdown zettelkasten / wiki and mixing it with a journal, based on telescope.nvim
A Neovim (lua) plugin for working with a markdown zettelkasten / wiki and mixing it with a journal, based on telescope.nvim - nvim-telekasten/telekasten.nvim
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux StuffGitHubnvim-telekasten
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

📽️ Videos I Am Creating for You

I don't usually do rant videos but this is a first. An argument against 'sudo apt update' and 'sudo apt upgrade'. Is it time to unify these two into a single command? Please take this opinion video lightly even if you disagree (and you have every right to disagree and express your opinion).

Desktop Linux is mostly neglected by the industry but loved by the community. For the past 13 years, It's FOSS has been helping people use Linux on their personal computers. And we are now facing the existential threat from AI models stealing our content.

If you like what we do and would love to support our work, please become It's FOSS Plus member. It costs $24 a year (less than the cost of a McDonald's burger a month), and you get an ad-free reading experience with the satisfaction of helping the desktop Linux community.

Join It's FOSS Plus

💡 Quick Handy Tip

In the GNOME Files app (Nautilus), you can left-click and drag to select multiple items. To add more items to your selection, hold the CTRL key while dragging; this lets you include additional files lower in the list without losing your previous selection.

FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

Take this personality quiz to find out what kind of terminal user you are.

What Type of Terminal User Are You? [Personality Quiz]
Find out which terminal persona you are because your Linux habits say more about you than your horoscope ever could.
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

🤣 Meme of the Week: Linux, the savior of old hardware and those wronged by Microsoft and Apple.

FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On October 06, 1942, Chester Carlson patented electrophotography, a way to make dry copies of text and images on paper without using ink or chemicals. A few years later, the Haloid Company licensed his patent, renamed the process xerography, and eventually became Xerox, turning document copying into a global industry.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: FOSSers are talking about the planned Android sideloading policy change from Google. Got any insights to add?

About Android Sideloading Apps Policy Changes
I’ve been reading and seeing videos about some Google policy changes that would affect side-loading of apps on Android in the next few years. Doesn’t sound like it’s going to be a positive change for developers or Free and Open Source projects like F-Droid. I’m wondering what others think of the situation and if they’ve come across any interesting work-arounds to keep side-loaded apps on their phones.
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS CommunityLaura_Michaels
FOSS Weekly #25.41: Windows 11 Fiasco, Ubuntu 25.10 Releasing, Joplin Tips, NeoVim Journals and More Linux Stuff

❤️ With love

Please share it with your Linux-using friends and encourage them to subscribe (hint: it's here).

Share the articles in Linux Subreddits and community forums.

Follow us on Google News and stay updated in your News feed.

Opt for It's FOSS Plus membership and support us 🙏

Enjoy FOSS 😄

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43 Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

Von: Abhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

Last month, Austria's armed forces ditched Microsoft Office for LibreOffice. This is surely positive news, but it also makes us think about something crucial. The move to switch to open source is often driven by monetary benefits. Since these organizations often save a hefty amount, should they not contribute some part of their savings back to the open source project they are relying on? What do you think?

Austria’s Armed Forces Gets Rid of Microsoft Office (Mostly) for LibreOffice
The Austrian military prioritizes independence over convenience.
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

💬 Let's see what you get in this edition:

  • ZimaOS adding a paid tier.
  • A new Linux kernel release.
  • GUI apps in terminal.
  • Fedora floating a proposal on AI.
  • Revamped Proton Mail mobile apps.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!

📰 Linux and Open Source News

Fedora 43 is due soon. Here are the new features arriving with it:

Fedora 43 Release Date and New Features
A close look at the new features coming in Fedora 43.
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

FOSS is an important consideration for creatives in 2025.

From Disillusionment to Freedom: Why Creatives Need FOSS Now More Than Ever
More than ever, creative professionals need to exert control over their digital footprint. Big tech will not give us control—we have to take it. Free and Open Source (FOSS) software gives us a path forward. The path isn’t easy, but I argue nothing worthwhile is.
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsTheena Kumaragurunathan
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

Ruby's ecosystem is under threat from corporations.

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

Explore terminal shortcuts to enhance your efficiency. I have shared it in the past too but it's worth a reshare.

Speaking of enhancing efficiency, here are a few tips Linux users can use to be more productive.

I understand that not everyone is a keyboard shortcut maestro, so here are a few tips to master the finger swipe gesture in GNOME desktop environment.

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

These 3D-printed cases for the Raspberry Pi will not disappoint.

13 Amazingly Innovative 3D Printed Cases for Raspberry Pi I Came Across
So what if I don’t have a 3D printer to print these cases. I can at least appreciate the creativity.
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Kumar
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

Raspberry Pi has quietly launched the 500+, a blingy, faster version of the original 500 model.

WebScreen is a crowdfunded secondary display for gamers and creators.

The Raspberry Pi can be used for retro gaming, you know. The other Abhishek shows it with his latest work.

✨ Project Highlights

I recently discovered Sync-in, an open source platform that facilitates file sharing, sync, and collaboration.

Sync-in
The secure, open-source platform for file storage, sharing, collaboration, and syncing. - Sync-in
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux StuffGitHub
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

Another interesting tool I discovered is term.everything which allows you to run 'any' GUI app in the terminal. I am still exploring it and will be doing a full review soon.

GitHub - mmulet/term.everything: Run any GUI app in the terminal❗
Run any GUI app in the terminal❗. Contribute to mmulet/term.everything development by creating an account on GitHub.
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux StuffGitHubmmulet
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

🛍️ Deal worth a look

This ebook bundle from No Starch is a curated collection of titles to help you explore embedded electronics with Raspberry Pi and Arduino. Plus, your purchase supports the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Humble Tech Book Bundle: Electronics for the Curious by No Starch
Pay what you want to deepen your knowledge of video games and technology with our latest Tech Book Bundle: Electronics for the Curious.
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux StuffHumble Bundle
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

📽️ Videos I Am Creating for You

Zorin OS 18 is coming up with new features specially planned for new Linux users who are migrating from Windows 10. I discuss those features in the latest video.

Desktop Linux is mostly neglected by the industry but loved by the community. For the past 13 years, It's FOSS has been helping people use Linux on their personal computers. And we are now facing the existential threat from AI models stealing our content.

If you like what we do and would love to support our work, please become It's FOSS Plus member. It costs $24 a year (less than the cost of a McDonald's burger a month), and you get an ad-free reading experience with the satisfaction of helping the desktop Linux community.

Join It's FOSS Plus

💡 Quick Handy Tip

In Firefox, you can forget about one site, by erasing its browsing history, download history, cookies, login, etc. First, go to MenuHistoryManage History.

FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

Here, locate the website you want to forget about (one of those spicy ones, perhaps?), right-click on the website, and then select "Forget About This Site..." When asked, click on "Clear data" to clear any data related to that website.

Following this method means that the website will be gone forever from your history, unless you visit it again.

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

Seeing Halloween is close, are you in the mood to hunt a Daemon in our latest crossword?

Daemon Hunter: Crossword Edition
Background processes, foreground fun! Can you summon all the daemons and solve this Linux crossword?
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

🤣 Meme of the Week: One of the worst crimes in the world of Linux.

FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On October 2, 1955, the ENIAC, the world’s first general-purpose electronic computer, was retired. Built by John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert, it could perform 5,000 operations per second.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: Pro FOSSer Neville asked a really important question in the forum a few days ago, and the replies on that so far have been wonderful.

Why do people come to this forum? Feedback please
Lets see if we can find out what aspects of this forum are most appreciated by our members. I will start it off. What I mostly appreciate from this forum is some mental challenge helping to solve computing issues inspiration… the flow of new ideas Can each of you attempt to summarize what you see as important or rewarding in our forum.?
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS Communitynevj
FOSS Weekly #25.40: Fedora 43  Features, Kernel 6.17, Zorin OS 18, Retro Gaming Setup and More Linux Stuff

Fellow Pro FOSSer Xander started a thread, asking for ideas to make the most unusable desktop environment.

❤️ With love

Please share it with your Linux-using friends and encourage them to subscribe (hint: it's here).

Share the articles in Linux Subreddits and community forums.

Follow us on Google News and stay updated in your News feed.

Opt for It's FOSS Plus membership and support us 🙏

Enjoy FOSS 😄

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux Stuff

Von: Abhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux Stuff

There were two smartphone launches recently, both with hardware kill switches. One is the Murena-powered HIROH Phone, and the other is the Furi Labs FLX1s. FLX1s uses a Debian based operating system.

Now, these are not necessarily for everyone, and they sure are not cheap. I mean, they might not be as expensive as iPhones or Samsung Galaxy S series, but they are surely in the mid-range.

These are more suited for journalists and activists who have to protect sensitive data and hence the kill switch. That doesn't mean a privacy aware regular Joe (or Jane) cannot opt for them. It's just that lack of some mainstream features could cause frustration. What do you think?

💬 Let's see what you get in this edition:

  • Apt receiving a much-needed upgrade.
  • Lots happening in the open source space.
  • An early look at LMDE 7 and Zorin OS 18.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!

📰 Linux and Open Source News

New Proposal Looks to Make Linux Multi-Kernel Friendly
If approved, Linux could one day run multiple kernels simultaneously.
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux Stuff

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

A coalition of open source organizations has called out predatory practices.

Open Source Infrastructure is Breaking Down Due to Corporate Freeloading
An unprecedented threat looms over open source.
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux Stuff

If you are around South Korea, then you should definitely attend this year's Open Source Summit Korea!

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

Hyprland Made Easy: Preconfigured Beautiful Distros
Here are the projects that lower the entry barrier by providing a preconfigured Hyprland option.
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux Stuff

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

Cool down your Raspberry Pi in style with these mini PC cases.

Raspberry Pi 5 Tower Cases to Give it Desktop Gaming Rig Look
Pi 5 is a remarkable device and it deserves an awesome case. Transform your Raspberry Pi 5 into a miniature desktop tower PC with these cases.
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux Stuff

Also explore some must know Ollama commands to manage local AI models.

✨ Project Highlight

Net Commander is a new project from Elelab that brings network troubleshooting, Wi-Fi surveys, SSH jumping, CIDR calculations, and more into VS Code.

The author had reached out to us, but we haven't tested the plugin extensively yet.

GitHub - elelabdev/net-commander: Net Commander supercharges Visual Studio Code for Network Engineers, DevOps Engineers and Solution Architects streamlining everyday workflows and accelerating data-driven root-cause analysis.
Net Commander supercharges Visual Studio Code for Network Engineers, DevOps Engineers and Solution Architects streamlining everyday workflows and accelerating data-driven root-cause analysis. - ele…
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux StuffGitHubelelabdev
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux Stuff

📽️ Videos I Am Creating for You

Explore DuckDuckGo's lesser known features in our latest video.

Desktop Linux is mostly neglected by the industry but loved by the community. For the past 13 years, It's FOSS has been helping people use Linux on their personal computers. And we are now facing the existential threat from AI models stealing our content.

If you like what we do and would love to support our work, please become It's FOSS Plus member. It costs $24 a year (less than the cost of a McDonald's burger a month), and you get an ad-free reading experience with the satisfaction of helping the desktop Linux community.

Join It's FOSS Plus

💡 Quick Handy Tip

In GNOME's Nautilus file manager, you can drag and drop a tab from one window to another Nautilus window, just like browsers. Or, drag it out to open it as a new window.

See below to learn how. 👇

🎋 Fun in the FOSSverse

🧩 Quiz Time: Open source is full of forks; can you match the projects with their community-based forks/alternatives?

Community Strikes Back [Puzzle]
Forked it!
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux Stuff

🤣 Meme of the Week: The contempt is real, people. ☠️

FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux Stuff

🗓️ Tech Trivia: On September 22, 1986, a U.S. federal judge ruled that computer code could be copyrighted, giving software the same legal protections as books and other written works.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 From the Community: One of our regular FOSSers has a question about terminals. Can you help?

Terminal: What app do you to see a .log file through pagination and with colors?
Hello Friends In a Terminal: What app do you to see a .log file through pagination and with colors? I did do a quick research in the web and I found https://lnav.org/ (not tested yet) But just being curious if you have your own recommendation. It to be used with https://logback.qos.ch where is used the following Logger Levels: trace,debug,info,warn,error If I use Visual Studio Code for long files (20MB-50MB) it consumes ram as a wolf, it even worst for many .log files opened at the same tim…
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS CommunityManuel_Jordan
FOSS Weekly #25.39: Kill Switch Phones, LMDE 7, Zorin OS 18 Beta, Polybar, Apt History and More Linux Stuff

❤️ With love

Please share it with your Linux-using friends and encourage them to subscribe (hint: it's here).

Share the articles in Linux Subreddits and community forums.

Follow us on Google News and stay updated in your News feed.

Opt for It's FOSS Plus membership and support us 🙏

Enjoy FOSS 😄

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

Von: Abhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

We hit a major milestone on our Mastodon account. We crossed the 40,000 mark. It's a pleasant surprise. We have a lot more people on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and even YouTube. But seeing this number on a non-mainstream platform like Mastodon gives a positive uplift🕺

FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

💬 Let's see what you get in this edition:

  • Ubuntu making a major change.
  • A long-time KDE contributor leaving.
  • The Apache Software Foundation's rebranding.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!
  • This edition of FOSS Weekly is supported by TigerData.
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

TigerData, the creators of TimescaleDB, are on a mission to make Postgres the fastest database for modern workloads. See how Postgres can scale to 2 PB and 1.5 trillion metrics per day—all without proprietary black boxes or hidden tools. With Tiger Postgres, you get massive scale without sacrificing the SQL you already know and love.

TigerData Postgres Scaling

📰 Linux and Open Source News

GNOME 49 is released. Ubuntu 25.10 and Fedora 43 will have them. Rolling distros like Arch should have them in a week or so, hopefully.

GNOME 49 Launches With New Apps, Nautilus Redesign, and GNOME Shell Upgrades
Many fresh applications and a refined user interface mark this release.
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

The Rustification of Ubuntu has some performance hurdles to tackle.

Rust Coreutils Are Performing Worse Than GNU Coreutils in Ubuntu
Ubuntu’s Rust move shows promise, but questions remain on performance.
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

Top 10 Mistakes New Linux Users Make
Every Linux user makes these rookie mistakes. Get to know them before you do, or have you already got into trouble?
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAnkush Das
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

Turn your Pi into a powerhouse with the Pironman 5 Max.

Running local LLMs on your phone isn't science fiction! You can try running a local AI on your Android smartphone. Don't expect a superb experience, but it can help in some cases.

And I tried my hands on a Raspberry Pi Pico 2 kit. It's a well-thought-out device primarily aiming to help children get into STEM.

Review: Elecrow’s All-in-one Starter Kit for Pico 2
For anyone looking to introduce themselves or their children to the exciting world of electronics and programming, this starter kit offers a good entry point into these essential modern skills.
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

✨ Project Highlight

Readest is a solid eBook reader choice that runs great on Linux (but is not limited to).

This Could Be My New Favorite eBook Reader App on Linux
Readest offers a modern cross-platform eBook reading experience on Linux.
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

📽️ Videos I Am Creating for You

Learn about using and managing AppImages in Linux in our latest YouTube video.

🧩 Quiz Time

What's in a Container? A lot, if you can solve it.

Crossword: What’s in the Container?
Containers are fun… until they’re in a crossword. 🧩Test your Docker IQ and see if you can solve this without running docker --help in panic mode.
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

Desktop Linux is mostly neglected by the industry but loved by the community. For the past 13 years, It's FOSS has been helping people use Linux on their personal computers. And we are now facing the existential threat from AI models stealing our content.

If you like what we do and would love to support our work, please become It's FOSS Plus member. It costs $24 a year (less than the cost of a McDonald's burger a month), and you get an ad-free reading experience with the satisfaction of helping the desktop Linux community.

Join It's FOSS Plus

💡 Quick Handy Tip

You can easily save sessions in KDE Plasma. First, go into KDE Settings -> Session -> Desktop Session. Here, under the "Session Restore" section, toggle on the "When session was manually saved" button.

FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

This will add a new "Save Session" button to your Power Menu, as shown in the screenshot above (on the right). Click on it to make Plasma remember the apps that are open and restore them on the next login.

To customize the behavior further, open the apps you need at login and click the button again to change the apps.

🤣 Meme of the Week

You never know when you might need them!

FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

🗓️ Tech Trivia

The Association for Computing Machinery was founded on September 15, 1947. Today it has over 100,000 members worldwide and organizes conferences and workshops to advance computing knowledge and technology.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 FOSSverse Corner

One of our readers has sent over a reimagination of what Tux, the mascot of Linux, can be.

Tux Redesign... Unofficial
Hey FOSSers, A reader, Michael Kolesidis, sent me an email and shared a redesigned, modern, and simplified version of our beloved Tux mascot that he designed and released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license. I am sharing them with you here: There is also a I <3 Tux styled version: You can find the new designs on Wikimedia. 🔗 Redesigned Tux: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tux_Redesign.svg ❤ “I Love Linux” derivative: https://…
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS Communityabhishek
FOSS Weekly #25.38: GNOME 49 Release, KDE Drama, sudo vs sudo-rs, Local AI on Android and More Linux Stuff

❤️ With love

Please share it with your Linux-using friends and encourage them to subscribe (hint: it's here).

Share the articles in Linux Subreddits and community forums.

Follow us on Google News and stay updated in your News feed.

Opt for It's FOSS Plus membership and support us 🙏

Enjoy FOSS 😄

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

Von: Abhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

Linux Mint 22.2 Zara is available now. Existing Mint 22.1 users can choose to upgrade or stay with their current version.

Ubuntu 25.10 is a month away. I tried it and shared the new features in the latest video. Among those features, I find the switch to Rust-based sudo the most intriguing. I am working on an article that takes a deeper look at it.

KDE's very own Arch-based distro makes the first alpha release and Sourav already took it for testing.

These were some of the highlights from this week.

💬 Let's see what else you get in this edition

  • Microsoft open sources BASIC.
  • SSD factors to consider before buying.
  • Switzerland's new open source AI model.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!
  • This edition of FOSS Weekly is supported by PrepperDisk.
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

PrepperDisk gives you a fully offline, private copy of the world’s most useful open-source knowledge—so your access doesn’t depend on big platforms, networks, or gatekeepers.

Built on a Raspberry Pi, it bundles projects like Wikipedia, maps, and survival manuals with tools we’ve built and open-sourced ourselves. It’s a way to safeguard information freedom: your own secure, personal archive of open knowledge, ready anywhere—even without the internet.

Explore PrepperDisk

📰 Linux and Open Source News

Linux Mint 22.2 "Zara" has been released.

The Wait is Over! Linux Mint 22.2 “Zara” is Here
A fresh Linux Mint release with many refinements.
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

GNOME has had to take a step back in its campaign to remove X11 support.

U Turn! X11 is Back in GNOME 49, For Now
A temporary move that gives people some breathing room.
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

KDE Linux is finally here, albeit in an unfinished alpha form.

KDE’s Very Own Linux Distro Just Hit Alpha
I am still livid that they didn’t name it KLinux or Kinux.
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

Considering buying an SSD? Speed isn't everything.

Speed Isn’t Everything When Buying SSDs - Here’s What Really Matters!
Remember this for the next time you’re shopping for an SSD.
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

✨ Project Highlight

Or, how about a Linux distribution that turns any machine into a retro gaming console?

This Linux Gaming Distro Uses SD Cards as Game Cartridges (Just Like the 90s)
Insert cartridge, power on, play. No launchers or accounts required.
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

📽️ Videos I Am Creating for You

Ubuntu 25.10 Questing Quokka is less than a month away. New terminal with container integration, new sudo are among the main highlights. Watch them in action in this new video.

🧩 Quiz Time

Can you spot all the errors with these Linux Commands?

Guess the Errors With These Linux Commands
Put your Linux command line knowledge to some test.
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux StuffIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

Why should you opt for It's FOSS Plus membership:

✅ Ad-free reading experience
✅ Badges in the comment section and forum
✅ Supporting creation of educational Linux materials
✅ Free Linux eBook

Join It's FOSS Plus

💡 Quick Handy Tip

In GNOME, you can resize the window without placing the cursor at the edge or corner and dragging. Open GNOME Tweaks and go to the Windows section. Here, enable the "Resize with Secondary-Click" option. Also, remember to set a modifier key (it is the Super key by default).

FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

Now, in an active window, hold the modifier key and then right-click and drag anywhere in the window. Another thing to note is that this behavior is enabled by default in KDE Plasma, where the Super key is a modifier key.

🤣 Meme of the Week

Linux is very versatile! 😎

FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

🗓️ Tech Trivia

FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff
Source: CHM

On September 9, 1947, engineers working on the Harvard Mark II computer found a moth stuck in a relay, causing the system to malfunction. They taped it into the logbook with the note "First actual case of bug being found." Grace Hopper later shared the story, making it the most famous "computer bug" in history.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 FOSSverse Corner

FOSSers are discussing what the most underrated Linux distro is. Got any in mind?

What is the most underrated Linux distribution?
There are some distros like Debian, Ubuntu and Mint that are commonly used and everyone knows how good they are. but There are others that are used only by a few people and perform equally as well. Would you like to nominate your choice for the most underrated Linux distro? I will nominate Void Linux… it is No 93 on distrowatch and performs for me as well as MX Linux or Debian.
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux StuffIt's FOSS Communitynevj
FOSS Weekly #25.37: Mint 22.2 Released, Official KDE Distro, Kazeta Linux for 90s Gaming, Ubuntu 25.10's New Terminal and More Linux Stuff

❤️ With love

Please share it with your Linux-using friends and encourage them to subscribe (hint: it's here).

Share the articles in Linux Subreddits and community forums.

Follow us on Google News and stay updated in your News feed.

Opt for It's FOSS Plus membership and support us 🙏

Enjoy FOSS 😄

✇It's FOSS

FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

Von: Abhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

Ubuntu 25.10 is nearly a month away. A new default terminal and rust-based sudo are among the prominent new features in this upcoming release.

Ubuntu 25.10: Release Date and New Features in Questing Quokka
Take a look at the new features and changes you’ll see in the upcoming Ubuntu 25.10 release.
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and MoreIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

What intrigues me is that the new default terminal is already in use on Fedora 42.

Another interesting development this week is Vivaldi's denial to include AI features in its browser. When AI is being pushed everywhere, it is interesting to see Vivaldi opposing it, at least for now.

💬 Let's see what else you get in this edition

  • New launches by Proton and Tuta.
  • Microsoft donating its open source project.
  • An interview with Linux Foundation India's head.
  • And other Linux news, tips, and, of course, memes!

📰 Linux and Open Source News

🧠 What We’re Thinking About

It looks like Mozilla's main revenue stream is safe from the axe.

Mozilla’s Lifeline is Safe After Judge’s Google Antitrust Ruling
Mozilla can continue receiving Google payments under new antitrust ruling.
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and MoreIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

We recently had a nice chat with Arpit Joshipura, the head of Linux Foundation India.

From Consumer to Contributor: How Linux Foundation India is Shaping the Future of Open Source
Linux Foundation India head talks growth, projects, and developer communities.
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and MoreIt's FOSS NewsAbhishek
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

🧮 Linux Tips, Tutorials, and Learnings

Check out these distros that help you get the retro gaming console feel.

Linux Distros That Turn Your PC into Retro Gaming Console
Looking to spice up your system as a retro gaming console? These Linux distributions can help you do that.
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and MoreIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

👷 AI, Homelab and Hardware Corner

Unleash a mini VM lab on your Pi with Proxmox.

Installing Proxmox on a Raspberry Pi to run Virtual Machines on it
Though Proxmox is not officially available for Raspberry Pi yet, you can surely be experimental and install it on your Pi like I did.
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and MoreIt's FOSSAbhishek Kumar
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

In the rapidly growing list of 'gadgets I wish to own', I have added this teeny tiny TV. It's an actual TV-like device that can play videos on the SD card and can be operated by remote or through the knob to give you the 80s feel.

FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

Note that it cannot play actual TV channels. An interesting gadget that can be used in miniature designs or put on display on your desk or shelf.

TinyTV® 2 with Tiny Remote
DESCRIPTION The TinyTV® 2 is the cutest way to watch your favorite videos and full-length movies. It is fully assembled, comes preloaded with videos, and works right out of the box. Adjust the volume and surf between channels by turning the knobs on the TinyTV 2 or by using the included Tiny Remote control. The TinyTV®
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and MoreTinyCircuitsTinyCircuits
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

It's not expensive for people living in the US, but for me it will cost a lot in international shipping and custom duty and hence it goes on my wishlist.

✨ Project Highlight

Pogocache has set out to beat the likes of Redis, Valkey, etc. in their game.

Pogocache: High-Performance, Multi-Protocol Redis Alternative
Redis, who? Pogocache offers speed, simplicity, and flexibility for modern caching needs.
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and MoreIt's FOSS NewsSourav Rudra
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

📽️ Videos I am Creating for You

Explore some of the lesser-known options of the Top command, the OG system monitoring tool of Linux systems.

🧩 Quiz Time

Can you guess these legendary open source projects?

Guess the Legendary Open Source Projects: Crossword
Time to exercise those grey cells and correctly guess these legendary open source projects that have hugely impacted the tech world we live in.
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and MoreIt's FOSSAbhishek Prakash
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

Why should you opt for It's FOSS Plus membership:

✅ Ad-free reading experience
✅ Badges in the comment section and forum
✅ Supporting creation of educational Linux materials
✅ Free Linux eBook

Join It's FOSS Plus

💡 Quick Handy Tip

In Nautilus file manager, go into the "Preferences" menu via Ctrl + , and scroll down to the bottom. Here, in the "Grid View Captions" section, set the option called "First" to the parameter "Detailed Type".

FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

Now, when you are in the "Grid View" (accesible via the toggle near the address bar), you will get detailed information on each file's filetype/format, like PNG, Python 3 script, Shell script, HTML, etc.

🤣 Meme of the Week

Oh Neofetch, why did you have to go? 🥹

FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

🗓️ Tech Trivia

On September 1, 1994, the Library of Congress held its first planning meeting for a "virtual library". The project, which evolved into the National Digital Library Program, aimed to digitize fragile and rare items so they could be preserved and accessed online. Today, the Library’s digital collections make millions of items available worldwide.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 FOSSverse Corner

One of our regular FOSSers and moderators of our forum is looking for some accounting software recommendations. Can you help?

Accounting software recommendations?
Our association Trésorier wants to replace his software as its old (plus 10 years) and no longer available or supported company no longer exists. He cannot remember the name….. As its a computer problem, they turn to me to recommend a tool. I know nothing about accounts, its got to be 30 years since I used pegasus or sage and even then I was no expert just covered the minimum As we are an association and want the lowest price possible (free) but still with functions to balance our books I sug…
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and MoreIt's FOSS Communitycallpaul.eu (Paul)
FOSS Weekly #25.36: Ubuntu 25.10 Features, Top Command, Firefox Survives, Sudo Tips and More

❤️ With love

Please share it with your Linux-using friends and encourage them to subscribe (hint: it's here).

Share the articles in Linux Subreddits and community forums.

Follow us on Google News and stay updated in your News feed.

Opt for It's FOSS Plus membership and support us 🙏

Enjoy FOSS 😄

❌