31 May 2025
Planet KDE | English
This Week in Plasma: Plasma 6.4 stabilizes
Welcome to a new issue of This Week in Plasma! Every week we cover the highlights of what's happening in the world of KDE Plasma and its associated apps like Discover, System Monitor, and more.
This week we released a second beta version of Plasma 6.4 and worked a ton on polishing it up in preparation for general release in about two weeks. We're getting a good response from beta testers who are submitting lots of bug reports - please keep it up! These are hugely valuable, and we're prioritizing them.
Notable UI Improvements
Plasma 6.4.0
Handled more device types in the Bluetooth widget so that it's more accurate about identifying the device type. (Kai Uwe Broulik, link)
The Bluetooth pairing wizard now displays devices with real names on top so you can find them more easily. (Albert Astals Cid, link)
Improved keyboard navigation across search result columns in the Kicker Application Menu. (Christoph Wolk, link)
The Dictionary and Web Browser widgets now both use symbolic panel icons, to match what other widgets do now. (Christoph Wolk, link 1, link 2)

Made numerous functional and visual improvements to the Fifteen Puzzle widget. (Christoph Wolk, link 1, link 2, link 3, link 4, link 5, link 6)
Plasma 6.5.0
You can now advance to the next wallpaper in a wallpaper slideshow using a keyboard shortcut, if you assign one to the new global action we created for this purpose. (Kai Uwe Broulik, link)
KWin's Magnifier and Zoom effects now share their initial zoom level and zoom factor settings. (Ritchie Frodomar, link)
The Digital Clock widget's calendar add-ons page has been given a visual overhaul and looks much nicer now. (Christoph Wolk, link 1, link 2, and link 3)

Plasma now warns you that keeping the "Raise maximum volume" setting active for prolonged periods will damage the device's speakers, and lets you know it's designed only for temporary use to boost the volume of quiet media. (Nate Graham, link)

System Settings' Legacy X11 App Support page is now clearer about what you would use its settings for, and what the security consequences of doing so are. (Nate Graham, link)
The menu that appears when you click on the little app icon in a window's titlebar is now consistently called the "Window Menu" everywhere. (John Veness, link 1 and link 2)
Notable Bug Fixes
Plasma 6.3.6
Fixed a random-seeming KWin crash. (Vlad Zahorodnii, link)
Fixed a common crash in the Powerdevil power management subsystem. (Vlad Zahorodnii, link)
The Legacy X11 App Support settings now apply accurately no matter what keyboard layout you're using. (Vlad Zahorodnii, link)
The keyboard shortcut in the desktop context menu for the "Launch KRunner" menu item (if you've manually enabled it) is once again shown correctly. (Kai Uwe Broulik, link)
Fixed a very subtle visual glitch in the radio button switching animation. (Kai Uwe Broulik, link)
The Power And Battery widget no longer bugs you to install power-profiles-daemon
when it's already installed but your hardware simply doesn't support it. (Nate Graham, link)
Plasma 6.4.0
Fixed multiple bugs where dragging-and-dropping widgets onto panels or the desktop would only work once until Plasma was restarted, or could make Plasma crash, or where widgets dropped on a panel could overlap. (Marco Martin, link 1, link 2, link 3, and link 4)
Fixed a case where Plasma or System Settings could crash when you removed certain locations from the locations list for the Slideshow wallpaper plugin. (Marco Martin, link)
Fixed an extremely strange and subtle issue in Spectacle that would cause content on the wrong screen to get captured when using certain multi-screen arrangements with certain fractional scale factors. (Noah Davis, link)
Fixed a case where a newly-configured System Monitor Sensor widget wouldn't save its state after the system was restarted. (Arjen Hiemstra, link)
The Bluetooth widget no longer briefly shows the status as "Disconnecting" for a moment while actually connecting to a device. (Kai Uwe Broulik, link)
Clicking on the active Global Theme on System Settings' Global themes page no longer shows a dialog saying the theme is broken. (David Edmundson, link)
Installing or uninstalling an app while the Kickoff Application Launcher is open no longer makes it clear the visible page until you navigate away from it and then back again. This is useful for when you've got it pinned open and are uninstalling unnecessary apps you find there one-by-one. (Christoph Wolk, link)
Fixed the width of the main column in the Kicker Application Menu so that it returns to its normal width after clearing the search field text, and ridiculously long text now elides rather than being cut off. (Christoph Wolk, link 1 and link 2)
Fixed a bug in the Kicker Application Menu that would cause sub-menus to be displayed at the wrong size when switching to them immediately after viewing a smaller sub-menu with its own sub-menus. (Christoph Wolk, link)
Fixed a bug that caused the header backgrounds for the few remaining System Settings pages written in QtWidgets to not change properly after you switch color schemes until System Settings was restarted. (Marco Martin, link)
Fixed the window stacking order being sometimes scrambled when using the "Slide Back" effect. (David Edmundson, link)
Fixed a bug preventing the items in Firefox's popup showing recently downloaded files from being draggable as intended. (Vlad Zahorodnii, link)
Frameworks 6.15
Fixed a bug that caused KWin to crash when the screen arrangement is changed while the Overview effect was open. (Vlad Zahorodnii, link)
Fixed a bug that caused apps to hang when they try to access passwords if somehow your default KWallet wallet has gotten its name set to an empty string. (Marco Martin, link)
Fixed a bug that caused the KWalletManager app to freeze if you start creating a new wallet, then change your mind in the middle of the process and close the new wallet creation dialog. (Marco Martin, link)
Worked around a GTK bug a bug that caused some Breeze icons to appear as white rectangles in GTK 3 apps. (Mors Mortium, link)
In the "Get New [thing]" windows, the button to open the comments page is now an actual button, not an underlined link, which was misleading. (John Veness, link)
Qt 6.8.4
Fixed one of the most common random crashes in any and all QtQuick-based KDE software. (Ulf Hermann, link)
Qt 6.10
Fixed a bug that caused context menus in some apps to be offset and displayed in the wrong location when using a multi-screen setup. (Vlad Zahorodnii, link)
Other bug information of note:
- 3 very high priority Plasma bugs (same as last week). Current list of bugs
- 25 15-minute Plasma bugs (down from 27 last week). Current list of bugs
Notable in Performance & Technical
Plasma 6.5.0
Reduced memory usage of Plasma by keeping fewer unnecessary copies of each screen's wallpaper in memory. (David Edmundson, link)
Changing the icon theme no longer triggers an unnecessary refresh of the application metadata cache. (Nicolas Fella, link)
Qt 6.10.0
Implemented the ability to have companion items in QtQuick-based user interfaces label one another for the purpose of screen readers saying more sensible things when they're focused. Once this is released, we'll be able to start adopting it throughout KDE software! (Nicolas Fella, link)
How You Can Help
KDE has become important in the world, and your time and contributions have helped us get there. As we grow, we need your support to keep KDE sustainable.
You can help KDE by becoming an active community member and getting involved somehow. Each contributor makes a huge difference in KDE - you are not a number or a cog in a machine!
You don't have to be a programmer, either. Many other opportunities exist:
- Triage and confirm bug reports, maybe even identify their root cause
- Contribute designs for wallpapers, icons, and app interfaces
- Design and maintain websites
- Translate user interface text items into your own language
- Promote KDE in your local community
- …And a ton more things!
You can also help us by making a donation! Any monetary contribution - however small - will help us cover operational costs, salaries, travel expenses for contributors, and in general just keep KDE bringing Free Software to the world.
To get a new Plasma feature or a bugfix mentioned here, feel free to push a commit to the relevant merge request on invent.kde.org.
31 May 2025 4:00am GMT
30 May 2025
Planet KDE | English
Going to Akademy?
In September 2024, the annual KDE conference Akademy was held in Würzburg. I've been to all Akademies from 2004-2020 (except 2005). Then came Covid, private life, etc. So it was kind of special that I finally made it to Würzburg again, which was just a ~2h ride away by train. And it was a good decision: Since many KDE contributors (also those who stayed with KDE a for a log time) came to this Akademy. It was a good opportunity to meet old friends again.
And that remided me of a blog post I wrote 15 years ago: The Power of Developer Meetings. In that post I was highlighting the importance of face-to-face meetings. What I wrote back then is still relevant today, so I'll just repeat:
- Social aspect: You get to know the other developers involved in the project in real life, which is a great motivation factor and simplifies communication a lot.
- Productivity: Since you are sitting next to each other discussions about what to do and how to do what are very focused. It's amazing how quickly a project can evolve this way. (I still haven't seen such focused work in companies yet, even 15 years later).
- Knowledge Transfer: Since participants are experts in different areas, discussions lead to knowledge transfer. This is essential, as sometimes developers have very few free time to contributes to a project. Spreading the knowledge helps a lot to keep the project alive.
- Steady Contributions: New contributors always pop up, which is in particular very nice. Everyone is welcome to set a patch, get commit access and join development. Experience shows that participants joining developer meetings / conferences usually contribute for years to come.
I enjoyed meeting KWin developers (new and old ones), plasma developers, and Kate developers again (of course!). All in all I am very happy to see the lively community that KDE managed to be for over 25 years - well done!
Having said that, I am looking forward to Akademy 2025, that will be hosted in Berlin again. In case you are unsure to go there, I suggest to just do it! It's certainly going to be a very good experience, so go ahead and register now.
PS: Würzburg has one touristic spot, the "Alte Mainbrücke". Pretty much every tourist goes to this bridge and drinks a wine - I did so, too :-)

30 May 2025 6:25pm GMT
Web Review, Week 2025-22
Let's go for my web review for the week 2025-22.
The two types of open source
Tags: tech, foss, community, supply-chain, marketing, business
I'm not sure this dichotomy is enough for building a taxonomy of FOSS projects. But I guess it's a start and captures something often missing in other such attempts.
https://filiph.net/text/two-types-of-open-source.html
SteamOS massively beats Windows on the Legion Go S
Tags: tech, linux, gaming, kde, power, performance
Looks like Linux is now the best operating system for gaming on the go.
https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2025/05/steamos-massively-beats-windows-on-the-legion-go-s/
Why old games never die (but new ones do)
Tags: tech, gaming, vendor-lockin, culture
It's funny how old games can still have a cult following. It's unlikely to stop too… That's the good thing about limited lock in. Self hostable private servers, ability to play offline, tools to produce mods… They all contribute to such very long term successes.
https://pleromanonx86.wordpress.com/2025/05/06/why-old-games-never-die-but-new-ones-do/
Own Your Email Domain
Tags: tech, email, self-hosting, dns
You don't need to self-host the mail itself, but you definitely should control the domain.
https://matthewsanabria.dev/posts/own-your-email-domain/
How to fix email encryption
Tags: tech, email, security, cryptography, ux
Worth trying indeed. I'd love to see at least some of that widely adopted.
https://weddige.eu/en/articles/lets-encrypt-emails/
A Company Reminder for Everyone to Talk Nicely About the Giant Plagiarism Machine
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, copyright, satire
Nice little satire, we could easily imagine some CEOs writing this kind of memo.
At Amazon, Some Coders Say Their Jobs Have Begun to Resemble Warehouse Work
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, copilot, productivity, management, business, quality
If you expected another outcome on the average developer job from the LLM craze… you likely didn't pay attention enough.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/25/business/amazon-ai-coders.html
Google has a big AI advantage: it already knows everything about you
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, google, surveillance
Are we surprised they'll keep processing personal information as much as possible? Not really no…
https://www.theverge.com/tech/671201/google-personal-context-ai-advantage-data
The Who Cares Era
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, quality, culture
Nice piece. In an age where we're drowning in bad quality content, those who make something with care will shine. They need to be supported.
https://dansinker.com/posts/2025-05-23-who-cares/
Large Language Models Reflect the Ideology of their Creators
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, politics, research
Interesting research, this gives a few hints at building tools to ensure some more transparency at the ideologies pushed by models. They're not unbiased, that much we know, characterising the biases are thus important.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.18417
Tools
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, copyright, ethics
LLMs are indeed not neutral. There's a bunch of ethical concerns on which you don't have control when you use them.
https://adactio.com/journal/21926
The magic developer wand…
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, ethics, ecology, copyright
Not only the tools have ethical issues, but the producers just pretend "we'll solve it later". A bunch of empty promises.
https://gomakethings.com/the-magic-developer-wand…/
A Vibe‐Coding Experience
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, copilot, programming, complexity
An honest attempt at "vibe coding"… but once again the conclusion is "when it grows to non-trivial size, I'm glad my experience allowed me to finish the thing myself".
https://github.com/clauderouxster/kriegspiel/wiki/A-Vibe%E2%80%90Coding-Experience
On "Vibe Coding"
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, copilot, quality, economics, politics
It definitely has a point. The code output isn't really what matters. It is necessary at the end, but without the whole process it's worthless and don't empower anyone… It embodies many risks instead. I think my preferred quote in this article is this: "We are teaching people that they are not worth to have decent, well-made things."
https://tante.cc/2025/05/23/on-vibe-coding/
Net-Negative Cursor
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, copilot, productivity, quality
Indeed feels bad when there are so many problems in the example of LLM based completion you put on the front page of your website…
https://lukasatkinson.de/2025/net-negative-cursor/
The Recurring Cycle of 'Developer Replacement' Hype
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, copilot, nocode, hype, business
Just another hype cycle… The developer profession being in danger is greatly exaggerated.
https://alonso.network/the-recurring-cycle-of-developer-replacement-hype/
CAPTCHAs are over (in ticketing)
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, security, privacy
Or why CAPTCHA might become something of the past. I guess they'll live a bit longer as they become more and more privacy invasive.
https://behind.pretix.eu/2025/05/23/captchas-are-over/
Remote Prompt Injection in GitLab Duo Leads to Source Code Theft
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, copilot, gitlab, security
As LLM assistants get more and more embedded in the development process, it gets harder to ensure they behave safely. Quite a few interesting attack vectors in that one.
https://www.legitsecurity.com/blog/remote-prompt-injection-in-gitlab-duo
GitHub MCP Exploited: Accessing private repositories via MCP
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, copilot, github, security
Another example of attack vectors emerging with adding more and more LLM agents in the development process.
https://invariantlabs.ai/blog/mcp-github-vulnerability
How I used o3 to find CVE-2025-37899, a remote zeroday vulnerability in the Linux kernel's SMB implementation
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, copilot, security, audit
Looks like it's getting there as a good help for auditing code, especially to find security vulnerabilities.
Pain in the dots
Tags: tech, version-control, git, tools
I often tumble on this. The two and three dots notations means different things between git log and git diff. It is a tad annoying.
https://matthew-brett.github.io/pydagogue/pain_in_dots.html
Writing your own CUPS printer driver in 100 lines of Python
Tags: tech, linux, printing, cups
A good reminder that writing CUPS printer drivers doesn't have to be complicated.
https://behind.pretix.eu/2018/01/20/cups-driver/
The future of Flatpak
Tags: tech, linux, flatpak, community
Flatpak is at a crossroad I'd say. The project really needs to find a way to move forward.
https://lwn.net/Articles/1020571/
Memory Access Patterns Are Important
Tags: tech, programming, cpu, memory, caching, performance, multithreading
A bit dated perhaps, and yet most of the lessons in here are still valid. If performance and parallelism matter, you better keep an eye on how the cache is used.
https://mechanical-sympathy.blogspot.com/2012/08/memory-access-patterns-are-important.html?m=1
Isolates and Compressed References: More Flexible and Efficient Memory Management via GraalVM
Tags: tech, java, memory
Interesting advanced features of GraalVM to better manage the memory of complex Java programs.
Revisiting Loop Recognition in C++… in Rust
Tags: tech, rust, c++, programming, memory, performance, benchmarking
Interesting comparison between C++ and Rust for a given algorithm. The differences are mostly what you would expect, it's nice to confirm them.
https://blomqu.ist/posts/2025/loop-recognition/
Threads Beat Async/Await
Tags: tech, programming, multithreading, asynchronous, python, dotnet, javascript, java, rust
Or why I'm still on the fence regarding async/await. It's rarely the panacea we pretend it to be.
https://lucumr.pocoo.org/2024/11/18/threads-beat-async-await/
Rust streams and timeouts gotcha
Tags: tech, programming, rust, asynchronous
Indeed, bugs with async/await can be subtle in Rust.
https://laplab.me/posts/rust-streams-gotcha/
parking_lot: ffffffffffffffff…
Tags: tech, debugging, multithreading, rust
Nice deep dive into a bug lurking inside a lock implementation.
https://fly.io/blog/parking-lot-ffffffffffffffff/
Concepts vs type traits
Tags: tech, c++, type-systems
Good comparison between concepts and type traits in C++. Clearly at this point concepts should be favoured as they convey more intent to compilers and humans alike.
https://akrzemi1.wordpress.com/2025/05/24/concepts-vs-type-traits/
dynamix: A new take on polymorphism
Tags: tech, c++, design, object-oriented
A library bringing the mixins concept to C++.
https://github.com/iboB/dynamix
Pyrefly vs. ty: Comparing Python's Two New Rust-Based Type Checkers
Tags: tech, python, type-systems, rust
Early days but it looks like we got two interesting type checkers coming up for Python. Definitely worth keeping an eye on them.
https://blog.edward-li.com/tech/comparing-pyrefly-vs-ty/
Thousands separators
Tags: tech, programming, python
Nice trick for numbers formatting as strings in Python.
https://mathspp.com/blog/til/thousands-separators
Why are 2025/05/28 and 2025-05-28 different days in JavaScript?
Tags: tech, date, time, javascript
Date parsing is generally complicated… In JavaScript it is just insane.
https://brandondong.github.io/blog/javascript_dates/
Car Physics
Tags: tech, game, mathematics, simulation, physics
Nice explanation of everything you need to simulate to make a realistic car simulation in a game.
https://www.asawicki.info/Mirror/Car%20Physics%20for%20Games/Car%20Physics%20for%20Games.html
Test Isolation Is About Avoiding Mocks
Tags: tech, tests, tdd, design
Even if you do use mocks to isolate your tests, at least don't nest them.
https://www.destroyallsoftware.com/blog/2014/test-isolation-is-about-avoiding-mocks
Visualization Mnemonics for Software Principles
Tags: tech, design, object-oriented
A funny way to illustrate the principles behind the SOLID acronym.
https://daedtech.com/visualization-mnemonics-for-software-principles/
Design driven development
Tags: tech, architecture, tests, tdd, design
Both TDD and design docs complete each other well indeed. They just don't focus on the same activities in the project. That said, both later provide important insights on all the decisions taken to produce some code.
https://underlap.org/design-driven-development
Reinvent the Wheel
Tags: tech, programming, supply-chain, learning
For studying it makes sense. But don't shun other's work away only because of trust or ego issues.
https://endler.dev/2025/reinvent-the-wheel/
On work processes and outcomes
Tags: tech, engineering, processes, quality, safety
Interesting ways to look at processes and their outcomes. Depending on the mental model you won't ask the same questions when investigating incidents.
https://surfingcomplexity.blog/2025/05/10/on-work-processes-and-outcomes/
Managing strong personalities
Tags: management, team
I prefer aiming for egoless positions in teams… But if it doesn't work, I guess this little trick can help turn someone around.
https://betterthanrandom.substack.com/p/managing-big-egos
How to make sure nothing gets done at work
Tags: organization, bureaucracy, management, communication
You've see a co-worker doing this, right? They're unlikely to be spies, but still they're inadvertently using sabotage tactics.
https://fortune.com/2015/09/30/workplace-bureaucracy-simple-sabotage/
Models and science
Tags: science
A nice little explanation of scientific work and enquiry.
https://lemire.me/blog/2025/05/23/models-and-science/
Bye for now!
30 May 2025 5:24pm GMT
Techpaladin joins KDE's patrons

Techpaladin becomes an official KDE patron and contributes to our community's funding.
Techpaladin is a consultancy firm specialized in advancing the state of the art in KDE software.
Techpaladin was founded by experienced and prominent KDE contributors who develop KDE-based software for such high-profile companies such as Valve and Qt Group.
"KDE is the giant whose shoulders Techpaladin sits upon," says Nate Graham, CEO of Techpaladin, "so we're very happy to support the mission and the foundation that pushes it forward. KDE e.V. helps make what we do possible, so becoming a Patron is the logical next step!"
"We are glad to welcome Techpaladin as our Patron", says Aleix Pol, President of KDE e.V. "Although a young organisation, we are very familiar with much of the team and know they share a lot of the same values as KDE. I look forward to growing KDE and its products together with them - what better way to do so than as a Patron?"
Techpaladin joins KDE e.V.'s other patrons: Blue Systems, Canonical, g10 Code, Google, Kubuntu Focus, Mbition, Slimbook, SUSE, The Qt Company and TUXEDO Computers, who support free open source software and KDE development through KDE e.V.
30 May 2025 10:30am GMT
29 May 2025
Planet KDE | English
KDE Plasma 6.4 Beta Release
Plasma 6.4 second beta includes several bugfixes, some of notable bugfixes include,
- Xwayland: Fix leaking normal key presses with keyboard layouts other than English
- Map xinerama index to Output by output name
- Xwayland: use output names to find the primary output
- Discover: rpm-ostree: Don't try to parse an empty version.
- Discover: rpm-ostree: Fix rpm-ostree driver registration.
- drkonqi: Fix minimum systemd requirement
- spectacle: Hide capture windows before deleting them when accepting.
29 May 2025 12:00am GMT
28 May 2025
Planet KDE | English
Maui Release Briefing #8
Today, we bring you a report on the brand-new release of the Maui Project.
Community
To follow the Maui Project's development or to just say hi, you can join us on our Telegram group @mauiproject
We are present on X and Mastodon:
Thanks to the KDE contributors who have helped to translate the Maui Apps and Frameworks!
Check out our previous release notes at:
Downloads & Sources
You can get the stable release packages [APKs, AppImage, TARs] directly from the KDE downloads server at https://download.kde.org/stable/maui/
All of the Maui repositories have the newly released branches and tags. You can get the sources right from the Maui group: https://invent.kde.org/maui
MauiKit 4 Frameworks & Apps
With the previous version released, MauiKit Frameworks and Maui Apps were ported to Qt6; however, some regressions were introduced, and those bugs have now been fixed with this new revision.
Some of the changes and improvements were taking longer, so we skipped the February release and moved it to May, so here it is. With an ever-improving MauiKir set of frameworks powering the set os Maui Apps.
MauiKit Frameworks
A script element has been removed to ensure Planet works properly. Please find it in the original post.
With the new control Notification, it is much simpler and easier to dispatch notifications with MauiKit. To find more about MauiKit controls check out the documentation and examples.@maui_project https://t.co/ItSDxIDUkL#mauikit pic.twitter.com/zSdJeffXbp
- Camilo Higuita (@cmhiguita) January 20, 2025
A script element has been removed to ensure Planet works properly. Please find it in the original post.
- MauiKit notifications now allow you to set custom actions, not only using the notify method, but also for convenience by using the Maui.Notification type. see [https://api.kde.org/mauikit/mauikit/html/classNotification.html]
- The MauiKit controls templates for list and grid elements have been reviewed, and any binding loops have been squashed. Also, those elements such as GridBrowserDelegate, ListBrowserDelegate, ListItemTemplate, GridItemTemplate set their implicit sizes correctly.
- It is now possible for third parties to create custom styles that adapt to MauiKit. Creating a custom QQC2 style is quite simple; to preserve Maui visuals, the new style should use MauiKit properties for setting colors, and elements, margins, padding, and sizing, etc. To allow this, please refer to MauiMan property allowCustomStyling. see [https://api.kde.org/mauikit/mauikit/html/classStyle.html]
- Add more resize-edges to the ApplicationWindow in CSD mode
- MauiKit ImageViewer type has gained more properties for finer control
- MauiKit now disables effects when the software renderer is used.
- Added helper methods to classify types of text string, such as email, link, phone number, etc, see [https://api.kde.org/mauikit/mauikit/html/classHandy.html]
- More controls now support the attached properties from Controls, such as badges and status. see [https://api.kde.org/mauikit/mauikit/html/classControls.html]
- The keyboard navigation has been reviewed and refined.
- More consistent spacing and padding on the templated elements when some parts are not visible.
- Added method to check number of active windows per app. see [https://api.kde.org/mauikit/mauikit/html/classMauiApp.html]
- In nested and composed controls, use the background of the top root element.
- Fixes creating dialogs from component types.
- TabView and Page controls now support grouped properties for the tabBar and header and footer columns, respectively, to tweak the margins. see [headerContainer.margins: 10]
- The PageLayout control can now split the header elements into the footer, but also pick which section of the header will be moved when split, by using the property splitSection. see [https://api.kde.org/mauikit/mauikit/html/classPageLayout.html]
- Tweak and better translucency effects for the Page and TabBar headers and footers. (To disable effects, refer to the MauiMan Theme property: enableEffects)
- The Nitrux CSD theme has been improved to be more compact visually
- Fixes to SelectionBar drag and drop feature.
- SideBarView can now be resized live
- SideBarView now has a float property, which will not push the contents but float over it. see [https://api.kde.org/mauikit/mauikit/html/classSideBar.html]
- The ToastArea for notifications is now keyboard navigable.
- MauiKit-Filebrowsing fixes Tagging regressions and multithreading crashing issues.
- MauiKit-Terminal fixes and supports for translucency, signaling current working directory changes, exposing background and foreground colors properties, and updating the touch area.
- MauiKit-Documents fixes the search results highlights and supports initial text selection.
- MauiKit-ImageTools now makes use of the KEviv2 library wrapper for managing image metadata editing. Includes a new image editor based on OpenCV, and improves upon the existing interface for text detection in images OCR.
- MauiKit-ImageTools improves the keyboard navigation on its custom controls.
- MauiKit-FileBrowsing, the Tagging interface, now emits the right signals upon new tag creations. Improve the OpenWith dialog with an informative header. Improve keyboard navigation and multiple file selection in FileBrowser component using keyboards.
- Moreover, see [https://invent.kde.org/maui]
Maui Apps
Currently, the set of Maui Apps amounts to over 10+ apps. For this release, the focus has been to improve the experience in the main set of apps, such as Index, Pix, Statio, while keeping up to date with the other ones.
The apps now have better keyboard navigation support, include new features, and a cohesive layout/design where the app's main content is put on the front by using a modern "floaty" style.
Pix now includes, in the viewer, OCR auto recognition, along with a ui/ux for quickly selecting the text found in images. A new image editor backed by OpenCV , improved navigation patterns, fixed GPS browsing, and a metadata reader and editor now using KDE's library kexiv2. You can also quickly navigate multiple images from the editor, and in desktop environments, Pix supports opening an image per window.
Here you can watch Pix OCR in action:
The Pix image editor is coming from MauiKit-ImageTools, and for this initial release, it has the basic image manipulation controls, such as brightness, contrast, sharpness, etc. And some experimental filters. Upcoming versions should start adding up much more controls for more detailing editing. Algo object recognition is planned for upcoming releases by using OpenCV.
Station, the terminal emulator, now better supports command shortcuts in a new sidebar, which is useful for touch-based input. The sidebar is integrated using the new floaty style.
For those who fancy a good-looking terminal, Station brings back support for the translucency effect under Plasma. The screenshots below show Station on a PinePhone and a desktop under Plasma using the effect.
From previous releases, Station, can now launch and open URLs from the output by right-clicking on the selected text string. The touch area for mobile screens has been fixed, and the gesture shortcuts work great, and a bottom toolbar with common "keys" is available and responsive to the current program running, for example is running "nano" the keys will be relevant to that.
Index, out file manager, now has an action bar floating over the browser for quickly performing actions.
Index comes with improvements in the contextual menus when applying actions to multiple files and keyboard navigation.
- A more focused UI design.
- Index, Pix, and Vvave remember the last tag used and suggest it.
- Notifies when a file has been tagged and allows opening the given tag from the notification
- Fixes to the creation and destruction of dialogs.
- The embedded terminal can now be manually synced by using the context menu or the 'Ctrl+.' keyboard shortcut
Buho now supports opening notes in different windows in desktop mode. And exposes a server method for third-party apps to save notes to it quickly, for example, Pix is now using this interface to save the text found in an image to a note in Buho.
Shelf, using MauiKit-Documents, now has text selection support and improved found text highlights.
You can follow the project on Mastodon or X to keep up to date on the changes being made. And if you are planning to work on an app for Linux and considering MauiKit for the UI, please do not hesitate to reach up to us for help, advice, or suggestions. Some updates coming from X follow:
Pix image viewer with auto text detection@maui_project pic.twitter.com/OPpdmDaxUj
- Camilo Higuita (@cmhiguita) March 5, 2025
A script element has been removed to ensure Planet works properly. Please find it in the original post.
Pix is coming with a new image editor for the upcoming release. #mauikit@maui_project pic.twitter.com/Vh7LDvr6QJ
- Camilo Higuita (@cmhiguita) April 9, 2025
A script element has been removed to ensure Planet works properly. Please find it in the original post.
Buho - notes app- now supports opening notes on multiple windows for desktop mode. And coming next is support for Markdown text format! #mauikit@maui_project pic.twitter.com/29Ymxr3MFI
- Camilo Higuita (@cmhiguita) April 19, 2025
A script element has been removed to ensure Planet works properly. Please find it in the original post.
That's it for now. Until the next blog post, that will be a bit closer to the 4.0.3 stable release. 🙂
Release schedule
The post Maui Release Briefing #8 appeared first on MauiKit - #UIFramework.
28 May 2025 4:36pm GMT
Interactive Plots with PySide6
Nowadays it is getting more and more popular to write Qt applications in Python using a binding module like PySide6. One reason for this is probably Python's rich data science ecosystem which makes it a breeze to load and visualize complex datasets. In this article we focus (although not exclusively) on the widespread plotting library Matplotlib: We demonstrate how you can embed it in PySide applications and how you can customize the default look and feel to your needs. We round off the article with an outlook into Python plotting libaries beyond Matplotlib and their significance for Qt.
Continue reading Interactive Plots with PySide6 at basysKom GmbH.
28 May 2025 9:25am GMT
SteamOS destroys Windows
With the release of the Lenovo Legion Go S gaming handheld, we've now got a real apples-to-apples comparison of how Windows 11 fares against Linux (specifically, SteamOS with KDE Plasma) on the same 1st-party supported OEM hardware in a gaming context. And the results are pretty devastating for Windows in terms of performance and battery life - according to even windowscentral.com! Neither WindowsCentral nor the original video from Dave2d mention desktop mode, but the answer there is just as clear, as all of us in the FOSS space have known for ages.
We're winning, folks. If I polish my crystal ball, I see us peeling away groups of users from competing platforms one at a time: developers, gamers, artists, scientists, enthusiasts, and on and on. It's happening. The snowball is rolling down the hill, gaining momentum.
It can be hard to remember the big picture when we're nose deep in code, bugs, and icons all day, but that big picture is on our side. Never forget that everything you do in KDE is impactful!
28 May 2025 12:57am GMT
27 May 2025
Planet KDE | English
Qt’s New Bridging Technology - Looking Back to Move Forward
At Qt World Summit 2025, Qt Groupannounced a new bridging technologydesigned to help integrate Qt with various programming languages. In this post, I'd I also hope it will answer a few questions which we have received so far.
27 May 2025 8:29am GMT
25 May 2025
Planet KDE | English
KDE Stopmotion release 0.9.0 ported to Qt6
Being the workhorse for more than a decade, it took me by surprise that Qt 5 is going to run out of support tomorrow. Honestly, Qt 6 was released in late 2020 and I prefer using modern code bases that use features from the C++17 and C++20 standards. So, no reason to hold me back.
I am pleased to announce the release of KDE Stopmotion 0.9.0. It consist of the Qt 6 port and has no additional features or bug fixes. Quite boring, it does not even look nicer or different at all. Many thanks to Florian Satzger and Mark Penner for helping with the port when I got stuck.
Behind the curtain, we use KDE CI templates for the build pipeline, increased the minimum required version numbers for Qt, CMake and C++, and some minor warnings got fixed. We are back using semantic versioning. New features are added with an increased minor version number. Increased patch numbers are for bug fixes only.
Adding sound does not work properly, this is a known bug.
You can create the tar ball using the 0.9.0 Git tag.
Get involved!
I was super happy to receive help with the Qt 6 port. It is so cool to work with strangers and achieve so much. Being united by the desire to create powerful software, is a strong motivation.
I am desperately looking for more people to get involved in KDE Stopmotion. If you are looking for a place to make a contribution, consider it! Some areas for contributors come to my mind:
- Use more modern libraries to grab the images from cameras. We have several options and some of these are unmaintained for years. Adding more recent options would be great.
- Starting with integration into KDE's software stack. Stopmotion is still in the incubation phase. The software uses Qt but not KDE frameworks or other things from the ecosystem like handling the translations or a neat integration of the documentation.
- Improving our test automation would be great.
- The code base is 20 years old. Some C++ patterns used in the code might no longer be the best choice and a replacement with C++20 code might improve the quality.
25 May 2025 9:04pm GMT
This Week in KDE Apps
Welcome to a new issue of "This Week in KDE Apps"! Every week we cover as much as possible of what's happening in the world of KDE apps.
This week we look at the usability improvements landing in NeoChat, and KClock; important bug fixes in Akonadi; performance improvements in KTorrent and new features in Kate and KRDC.
Getting back to all that's new in the KDE App scene, let's dig in!
Multimedia Applications
Elisa Play local music and listen to online radio
Christoph Wolk fixed an issue where lyrics were displayed on top of the metadata of a song (link).
Okular View and annotate documents
Albert Astals Cid fixed opening password protected files on builds without KWallet (link).
Travel Applications
KDE Itinerary Digital travel assistant
Volker Krause added support for MOTIS instances without OSM street routing capabilities (link). This is the case for the backup instance of Transitous.
Volker also upstreamed various parts of Itineray and KTrip to KPublicTransport to be able to reuse them in both applications. This include the vehicle layout view (link 1, link 2 and link 3) and the DelayRow (link).
In terms of ticket support, Joshua Goins improved the reliability when parsing american airlines tickets (link). Volker improved the Flixbus PDF extractor (link). Additionally, Volker also added onboard API support for Ouigo ES (link).
Creative Applications
Krita Digital Painting, Creative Freedom
Wolthera van Hövell added support for parsing and writing SVG title and description elements (link).
Kdenlive Video editor
balooii added a rotation capability to monitor and effect stack tooling (link). They also fixed some artifact issues in the vectorscope tool on high zoom levels (link).
Jean-Baptiste Mardelle added an option to show thumbnails in the markers list dialog (link).

System Applications
Dolphin Manage your files
Facundo Almeida fixed an authentification issue when connecting to a server with SFTP and a public key and a keyboard-interactive authentication method (link).
Whale
Carl Schwan continued working on Whale, a QML based file manager, and redesigning the header to look more closely to the current Dolphin design (link).

Journald Browser Browser for journald databases
Andreas Cord-Landwehr reworked the search integration and added a button to toggle between case-sensitive/insensitive search (link).
Educational Apps Applications
LabPlot Interactive Data Visualization and Analysis
Martin Marmsoler added the possibility to create nested plots (link).

Martin also improved the axis ticks with a new algorithm to determine the spacing and number of major axis ticks (link).
Finally Martin also fixed a few issues. The cursor dock can now be correctly added when the properties dock is hidden (link). Formulas are correctly updated after importing them (link).
Social Applications
NeoChat Chat on Matrix
Joshua Goins overhauled how NeoChat restores rooms on space switch (link). Now when you switch spaces, the last room in that space is stored and will be restored.
Joshua improved many dialogs (link).
Joshua also went bug hunting on the message delegates in the timeline and fixed many issues (link). Notably the location map and context menu for non-text messages work again and some wording was improved. Speaking of context menus, Joshua also added a new context menu when right clicking on an avatar (link), added a share action to the maximized delegate (link), and made it possible to access all emojis from the context menu (link).
Joshua also improved the UX for rooms that don't have a canonical alias (link), fixed running NeoChat on Android (link), and reorganized some elements in the room settings (link).
Tobias created a mock server implementation of a Matrix server to use for testing (link).
James Graham made the user id elide in the user detail dialog when it is too long to avoid overflow (link).
Browsers and Networking
KTorrent BitTorrent Client
Andrey Semashev optimized various hot spots in KTorrent. He reduced the number of allocations for each packet from 3 to 1 (link), optimized the storage of some lists (link), reduced the algorithmic complexity of the file cache from O(log n)
to roughly O(1)
(link) and fixed some Qt container detaching issues (link).
Andrey Semashev also added support for OpenSSL as the cryptography backend (link).
Philipp Kiemle fixed some UI strings to be HIG complient (link 1 and link 2)
George Florea Bănuș added support for showing the total amount of bytes uploaded or downloaded for a file in the current session (link).
KRDC Connect with RDP or VNC to another computer
Fabio Bas and Luke Dashjr added a button to toggle clipboard sharing in KRDC (link).
Christopher Chan added support for admin console session (link).
KDE Connect Seamless connection of your devices
lzwind fixed a memory leak issue when a device is disconnected (link).
KDE PIM
Akonadi Background service for KDE PIM apps
Allen Winter updated the list of DAV providers, removing some defunct providers and adding new ones like Fastmail, SOGo, Citadel, Zoho, and Kopano (link 1, link 2, link 3, ...).
Allen also fixed a crash when trying to update an item (link).
Carl Schwan fixed three crashes related to fetching passwords from the system keyring found via Sentry (link 1, link 2 and link 3), and another crash when trying to load an account with an unknown authentication type (link).
Akonadi Console
Carl Schwan fixed a crash when editing or deleting a tag (link).
KOrganizer KOrganizer is a calendar and scheduling application
Allen Winter removed the Get Hot New Calendar feature from Korganizer (link). It was only featuring school holidays and football season calendars from the 2006-2008 era.
Allen hid the todo list from the KOrganized sidebar when already using the todo view (link) and added an option to show/hide the week numbers in the date navigator (link).
Kleopatra Certificate manager and cryptography app
Tobias Fella improved the success message when uploading a key (link), added a warning when disabling a certificate (link), and added a plural variant to a UI string when verifying multiple signatures from the same file (link).
Games
Chessament - Chess tournament manager
Manuel Alcaraz started incubating Chessament, a chess tournament manager.

Utilities
Clock Keep time and set alarms
Kai Uwe Broulik put the stopwatch and timer time in the navigation bar when on a different page (link).

Kai also added some explanation about the keyboard shortcuts (link).

Han Young added the ability to change the default timer sound (link).
Kate Advanced text editor
Leo Ruggeri added an "Edit line" entry to the diff widget context menu (link). The action opens the file referenced by the diff at the selected line.
Konsole Use the command line interface
Luca Carlon optimized some code where we did some uncesserary copy (link 1 and link 2).
ISO Image Writer Write an ISO Image to a USB Disk
Philipp Kiemle fixed a word puzzle issue (link).
…And Everything Else
This blog only covers the tip of the iceberg! If you're hungry for more, check out Nate's blog about Plasma and be sure not to miss his This Week in Plasma series, where every Saturday he covers all the work being put into KDE's Plasma desktop environment.
For a complete overview of what's going on, visit KDE's Planet, where you can find all KDE news unfiltered directly from our contributors.
Get Involved
The KDE organization has become important in the world, and your time and contributions have helped us get there. As we grow, we're going to need your support for KDE to become sustainable.
You can help KDE by becoming an active community member and getting involved. Each contributor makes a huge difference in KDE - you are not a number or a cog in a machine! You don't have to be a programmer either. There are many things you can do: you can help hunt and confirm bugs, even maybe solve them; contribute designs for wallpapers, web pages, icons and app interfaces; translate messages and menu items into your own language; promote KDE in your local community; and a ton more things.
You can also help us by donating. Any monetary contribution, however small, will help us cover operational costs, salaries, travel expenses for contributors and in general just keep KDE bringing Free Software to the world.
To get your application mentioned here, please ping us in invent or in Matrix.
25 May 2025 1:43pm GMT
24 May 2025
Planet KDE | English
Trying out KOReader and Wallabag (the first few days and months)
Introduction¶
I started writing this blog post in March, completely oblivious of Mozilla's plans of getting rid of Pocket, but with life and work being in the way I never got around to finishing it. Now that we know that Pocket is being shut down on 8 July, I decided to speed things up - and what better day to blog about eReaders than Towel Day!
For a long time already I have been aware of Wallabag - in fact, since it was still called (In the) Poche1. And have used it before, through its wonderful service https://wallabag.it.
But for equally long, I have also used Pocket (which used to be called Read-it-later). I found that some things worked better in Pocket and others in Wallabag. But the thing that ever so slightly tipped the scales in Pocket's favour several times before for me was that it had a seemless integration with my Kobo2 eInk reader.
I have also been keeping an occasional eye on alternative eReader software for many years, but never took the plunge for different reasons. One of the things that I was waiting to become brave enough to try out was also InkBox / Quill OS for Kobo devices. I was aware of KOReader and Plato, but was always betting a bit more on InkBox as a more "pure" full-blown FOSS OS as something I would eventually switch to.
Of course, I am using the venerable Calibre to manage my eBook collection. Lately instead of a local collection though, I have all my eBooks on my home server3 using the Calibre-Web for the whole family.
OK, with that brief introductory info dump over, here is how my first week (and at this stage, honestly, months) with KOReader + Wallabag went.
Day 1 - Braving up to flash my Kobo¶
At first, I was a bit scared and did not want to mess with setting up KOReader, as I heard it was very configurable and also I have had … mixed … experience with flashing devices so far.
So I decided this would be a weekend project and planned accordingly.
Long story short, after some searching and reading, I found on MobileRead forums the instructions for One-Click Install Packages for KOReader & Plato, so that is what I went with.
Honestly, it was pretty much as simple as it sounds! And it just installs alongside the official Kobo system too.
If you were even a bit curious, do not wait as long as I have - just go and try it. It really is dead simple!
I decided to use the archive that includes both KOReader and Plato, because I heard the former is very tweakable, but you need to put some effort into making it your own; and the latter has very pleasing defaults, but barely any options.
Day 2 - Install and first glance at KOReader and Plato¶
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the One-Click Install Packages was stupid-simple to do.
Essentially I ended up with an additional menu in the official Kobo firmware, where I can choose to launch either Plato or KOReader.
I later also had the opportunity to check that updating KOReader works from the device itself and is as simple as selecting "Update" from the main menu.
First, I tried Plato, and while I quite liked its æsthetics, the longer I used it, the more I wanted to tweak a few things here and there. I would say that if Plato does exactly what you want, it is a great option, though. Especially if you have a larger screen.
My very first exposure with KOReader turned out as expected - too many menus, too many options, too much stuff - I felt a bit overwhelmed. But after the inital shock, it took me just a few hours to get a good feel of everything. The KOReader user guide helped a lot here too.
At this point, I was hooked!
The previously overwhelming plethora of settings suddenly became a collection of options that I was looking forward to tame and make my eReader truly sing to my tune. A lot of hacks exist out there for Kobo's official firmware - and I used a few already -, but what KOReader offered out of the box was on a different level.
What also helps a lot is that you can easily disable plugins and menu entries that you do not use or want.
By the end of the day, I essentially set up my KOReader to be like I wanted it to. Sure, it took some hours, but it was well worth it.
Day 3 - Renewed interest in Wallabag¶
Both Plato and KOReader include a Wallabag client, so that got rid of one of my main reason to continue using Pocket.
With that out of the way, I went ahead and installed Wallabag on my home server4.
Which, thanks to YunoHost, was, again, just a one-click install :)
The set-up on KOReader was a bit more involved than just entering the username and password, but nothing too taxing.
Once it was set up though, it was about as easy to use as the official Pocket app on the offical Kobo firmware. I was honestly positiely suprised!
The main difference is that KOReader stores Wallabag articles as ePUB in a separate folder and syncs (in both directions) those with the Wallabag server. Treating articles as any other book on the device has some benefits, like annotation support (more on that later) and being able to modify styles etc.
I did try WallabaKo - the hack that puts the Wallabag client into Kobo's official firmware - before and it works in a similar way. But its method to sync the articles is (undestandably) a bit hacky and not as nice as KOReader's and the integration is not quite as frictionless. That said, if you do want to simply continue to just use the official Kobo firmware, WallabaKo is a perfectly fine solution. I do recommend you use the NickelMenu launcher to trigger the sync in that case.
Day 4 - Advanced Wallabag use, some automation¶
Today felt like the right time to poke around my new Wallabag install a bit.
As I used Wallabag before, I was quite comfortable with its basics and decided to read about some more advanced features and try to make things easier for me.
One thing I quickly made use of was to "program" a few rules to automatically tag an article. This makes finding a specific article - especially month after I have added or even read it - easier.
For example5:
if « domainName matches "kde.org" OR content matches "KDE" » then tag as « KDE »
if « domainName matches "curia.europa.eu" OR content matches "CJEU" OR content matches "Court of Justice of the European Union" » then tag as « sodna praksa, eu »
Occasionally the automatic tags are not perfect. But those can be easily changed already when you add the new article either through the browser plugin or the mobile app. Of course, you can also do it through the main WebApp too.
Then I remembered having seen some RSS support existed. And since there are some feeds that I know I would always read through my eReader anyway, that was an awesome idea! Unfortunately it was not exactly what I remembered …
Wallabag does offer RSS feeds you can subscribe to, but is not what I was looking for.
This feature was requested before, but the core team decided against adding it. It seems that they did add this feature into their SaaS offering though, so that is a bit bitter. If you really want to easily get RSS/Atom feeds directly onto your eReader, you can either have an account on wallabag.it
or use KOReader's News plugin.
Personally, I prefer having all my long articles in Wallabag, so I decided to just continue manually saving them.
Day 5 - Exploration, integration, interconnection¶
At this point, I had pretty much everything going well and was looking for improving my reading workflows.
Articles¶
When I find a new article/page online that I want to read later on my eReader there are two options:
- It is an article I found through the web browser.
- I save it using the browser plugin or the mobile app to Wallabag.
- In KOReader I sync with Wallabag and read the article on my eReader
- It is an article in a RSS/Atom feed I am already subscribed to through Nextcloud News.
- As I typically browse my feeds on my mobile phone, when I scroll through an article in the Nextcloud News mobile app that if find too long to read right now, I share it with the Wallabag mobile app.
- In KOReader I sync with Wallabag and read the article on my eReader
eBook libraries and collections¶
When it comes to eBooks themselves, I have a shared Calibre Web library with my family and can browse that directly from my KOReader.
How does this magic work?
Fairly simple really. On my home server I mount my Calibre folder in Nextcloud as external storage (with appropriate file system permissions) and then in turn use KOReader's WebDAV plugin to browse directly from my device.
There is also OPDS support but it currently does not work for my server. You can use it to browse public servers perfectly fine though!
Notes and marginalia¶
Since I started using a Zettelkasten(-like) method of taking notes in MarkDown, I was very happy to see that KOReader can export highlights and notes to MarkDown. Even better! It can push them to Nextcloud Notes, which I use to sync my notes between my phone and laptop anyway!
And this is where the "Wallabag articles are just ePUBs" coolness kicks in - because this means you can also treat highlights and notes the same as in any other eBook, export to Markdown and all.
That made me super happy!
Day 8 - Surprise of the day night¶
Something I spotted early on, was Night mode.
When I tried it it seemed to just invert the text and background colours to be white on black instead. Which I thought was pretty wasted on an eInk display, since it does not emit light anyway.
But no! It does make sense.
When I was reading late at night, as I usually do, I turned on the front-light and set it to the minimum, just to see a bit better.
And that is when it hit me - if you use Night mode when your front-light is on, you get even less light, because the black ink blocks it. That was such a delight to find out.
Day 9 - MOAR AUTOMATION … or not (yet)¶
I guess at this point it is safe to say I fully made the switch …
After being completely flabbergasted at the usefulness of Night mode, I noticed you can automate when it should turn on and off! So I did! So many options too!
Then I found and read up on Profiles and immediately my mind went buzzing with ideas:
- when I close a book, automatically export the notes (and upload them to my Nextcloud Notes)
- when I open an ePUB from (the) Wallabag (folder), apply the HTML5 CSS style
- when I open an ePUB that I generated from a webpage that contains legislation, apply certain style tweaks in order to make the structured articles and paragraphs actually palatable to the eyes
Unfortunately, I seem to have gotten ahead of myself.
The first one works, but I could not figure out how to get it to actually trigger automatically on book close. I have that option enabled, but it just does not fire. The trigger actually triggers and the export works in general too. Just the combination does not work. (I will file a bug and link it here when I do.)
As for the other two, it seems KOReader does not allow for style and style tweaks to be set in a Profile yet. (I will file a bug and link it here when I do.)
Next few weeks - end of honeymoon¶
In the days and weeks after the honeymoon phase I did start noticing some small issues:
- It is annoying that KOReader('s Wallabag client's) highlights and notes and the Wallabag highlights and notes are two completely separate things that have no idea about each other. My current solution is to try and annotatate books and articles only through KOReader, and ignore the fact that Wallabag has this functionality.
- In Wallabag you cannot search/filter for several tags at the same time (e.g. "AI" and "data mining" and "copyright"). - (I will file a bug and link it here when I do.)
- In KOReader Wallabag does not parse HTML
<abbr>
tags. - (I will file a bug and link it here when I do.) - Wallabag articles do not show their length in KOReader unless you open them, which is not major, but a bit annoying when you are trying to find something to read suitable to your time available. - (I will file a bug and link it here when I do.)
- When highlighting sentences in KOReader the end punctuation is not being included consistently. - (I will file a bug and link it here when I do.)
- Wallabag does not translate footnote anchors into internal anchors (i.e. strip the URL when it is the same as the article's), so clicking on a footnote tries to load a new page instead of just scrolling down. - (I will file a bug and link it here when I do.)
- I have not figured out yet how to sync book descriptions and star ratings from KOReader to Calibre-Web (or Wallabag).
- At some point exporting margialia to Nextcoud Notes started crashing - this is a known bug and should be fixed soon
- I have suggested some issues and improvements when it comes to the Markdown export of marginalia. There is some pushback, but also some workarounds offered. I need to look into it a bit more.
- It would be great if Wallabag tags could be used on KOReader too.
But ultimately, if I am completely honest, these are all issues I could only dream of having before I went on this adventure.
I hope they get fixed at some point, as that would make my little old eReader ever so closer to being the wonderful box the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy was imagined to be.
But even if not, this switch was well worth it!
Interesting related tidbits¶
When using a third-party WebDAV client (including your operating system's built-in client), you should use an application password for login rather than your regular password. In addition improved security, this increases performance significantly. See Nextcloud documentation on Third-party WebDAV clients.
hook out → whelp, now to find a replacement batteries for Kobo Aura and Kobo Aura One
-
"la poche" being French for "the pocket" ↩
-
My first eInk reader was the lovely iRiver Story HD, which I unfortunately cracked the screen of. After that I have been an avid user of Kobo, since they are pretty good, Linux-based devices, that you can side-load books on and are in general quite open to hacks (and are now officially self-repairable too). I still use my Kobo Aura, while others in the family have already Kobo Aura One models. On the other hand recently Kobo seems to have started to use Secure Boot, which could make it much more difficult to run alternative software on them. Definitely things to watch out and see, before buying. ↩
-
I "recently" migrated to YunoHost - more on that in a separate blog post. ↩
-
I did use https://wallabag.it - the developer's SaaS offering - before and was quite happy with it, I just wanted to host my own for me and my family. So I turned my previous subscription into a regular donation instead. ↩
-
In case you wonder about the
« »
brackets, the main developer(s) of Wallabag are French, and they use guillemets there. ↩
24 May 2025 10:00pm GMT
Open Transport Community Conference 2025 Call for Participation
As hinted here before, in October this year there will be the first dedicated conference for the Open Transport community, and the Call for Participation for that has just been published.

Open Transport Community Conference
In 2024 the Railways and Open Transport track at FOSDEM kick-started Transitous, and it looks like its 2025 edition also got something rolling: A dedicated multi-day conference for the Open Transport community.
Given the interest in that subject at various other events demand for that seems to be high, and following a discussion at FOSDEM an offer for a venue came in a few weeks later.
That sorted the logistical part, leaving us with the task of getting interested people together and come up with content. (And yes, after successfully dodging event organization for many years I misclicked on a meeting invite and am now part of the team organizing this…)
Time and location
The Open Transport Community Conference will happen on October 17th and 18th at ÖBB's Open Innovation Factory in the middle of Vienna, Austria.
Participation is free, but you have to register.
Who is this for?
We want to create an event that is useful for everyone interested in, contributing to or working on Free Software and Open Data around public transport and shared mobility.
And while I have little doubt that putting people involved with routing engines (MOTIS, OpenTripPlanner, OpenRouteService, etc), applications (GNOME's Maps and Railways, KDE's Itinerary and KTrip, Transportr and Öffi, Träwelling, etc) and public transport data and data formats (OSM, MobilityData, transport operators, etc) together in a room for two days will be valuable, a bit more of an agenda probably helps to convince more people of this.
The event will be organized as an Unconference, so somewhere between a conference with pre-planned talks and a Hack Weekend without any pre-defined structure. We felt that the main gap left by very packed events such as FOSDEM is time for people to talk to each other and exchange more in-depth on a subject, so that's what we are trying to focus on.
We also want to provide a forum for regional Open Transport communities to network and connect. A lot of things are happening locally and somewhat separate from each other, while often facing similar challenges that would benefit from more exchange and collaboration.
Call for Participation
We deviate from a pure Unconference approach a bit by already collecting possible session topics ahead of time. Spontaneous suggestions of course remain possible, but the idea here is to give people a better understanding of what to expect, given we are running this event for the first time.
Possible topics include but are by no means limited to:
- Schedule data, including data formats, data quality, tooling, QA as well as uses and lobby/outreach work for getting more data published.
- Shared and on-demand mobility data.
- Routing for all kinds of modalities, including engines, algorithms and APIs.
- Accessibility in public transport, including routing profiles, indoor routing, data standards and modeling and elevator status data.
- Passenger-facing applications around public transport and mobility usecases.
- Transit data analysis and research supporting passenger-facing usecases.
- Operations of open source public transport routing services.
- Digital tickets beyond proprietary platforms.
- Open source solutions for community-run mobility services.
- Geocoding.
- OpenStreetMap (OSM), including tagging schemas, data importing and upstream collaboration.
- Collaboration between public transport operators/agencies and the Open Transport community.
- Community work, such as local events/meetups.
See the Call for Participation for more information.
See you in Vienna!
Register for the event, propose session topics, join the event Matrix channel and spread the word!
24 May 2025 7:00am GMT
This Week in Plasma: time-of-day wallpapers
Welcome to a new issue of "This Week in Plasma"! Every week we cover the highlights of what's happening in the world of KDE Plasma and its associated apps like Discover, System Monitor, and more.
This week we really ramped up the focus on bug-fixing in preparation for Plasma 6.4's release in three weeks. But we also managed to squeeze in a huge feature for the next release too: time-of-day wallpapers! Plasma now supports automatically changing compatible wallpapers between their light and dark versions based on the day/night cycle, and also features some visual polish to make the previews of these dynamic wallpapers look better and be more clearly indicated as dynamic. This was done by Vlad Zahorodnii; thanks a lot Vlad!

As with last week, don't worry too much about the high-priority bugs list gaining items, as we're using this to prioritize fixes during the Plasma 6.4 beta period.
Notable UI Improvements
Plasma 6.4.0
Discover no longer includes wallpapers and other add-ons in its search results unless you initiate the search while on the "Add-Ons" page. This should make most search results much more relevant! (Ismael Asensio, link)

Did a few rounds of visual polish on the Audio Volume widget, which can get quite complicated-looking when multiple audio devices are present. (Christoph Wolk, link 1, link 2, link 3, and link 4)

Plasma 6.5.0
Made major UI improvements to the Sticky Note widget to support the use case of having it in your panel: now you can resize them to be much smaller; change the background color from the context menu; and when you choose the "Transparent" background color, the colored sticky note background disappears entirely, tightening up the outer margins significantly if you want to save space. (Kai Uwe Broulik, link)
If you choose a font with the text "Display" in its name as one of your global fonts, System Settings now warns you that this isn't a good idea, because these fonts are not intended for display on digital screens. (Nate Graham, link)
The first time you launch Emoji Picker (launchable via to the Meta+. keyboard shortcut by default), it now opens to a page showing everything, rather than the "Recent" page which of course would be empty. (Kai Uwe Broulik, link)
In the Networks widget, the "Hotspot" button is now always visible, but disabled when not available, and hovering over it tells you why it can't be used right now and what you can do to change that. (Nate Graham, link)

All the debugging effects on System Settings' Desktop Effects page have been removed from there and moved to the KWin debug window instead. Not sure how to access it? Search for "kwin debug" in Kickoff or KRunner! (Oliver Beard, link)
Improved accessibility and general keyboard navigation in the Audio Volume widget, Flatpak page in System Settings, and Updates page in Discover. (Christoph Wolk, link 1, link 2, link 3, link 4, and link 5)
Frameworks 6.15
Opening the "Advanced Options" window from the properties dialog for an item on the Plasma desktop no longer freezes Plasma completely until it's closed. (Akseli Lahtinen, link)
Improved accessibility and keyboard navigation throughout System Settings, particularly around the topics of passing focus between page content and the window's sidebars and footers. (Christoph Wolk, link)
When navigating Kirigami-based apps and System Settings pages using a screen reader, it will no longer rather pointlessly announce "LAYERED PANE ZERO ITEMS" all the time. (Christoph Wolk, link)
Notable Bug Fixes
Plasma 6.3.6
Fixed a case where KWin could crash when you disconnect multiple KVM-connected screens. (Xaver Hugl, link)
Fixed a bug that could cause per-widget Edit Mode to not exit properly. (Yu Wang, link)
Opening the "Add Action" window from the clipboard configuration dialog no longer freezes Plasma completely until it's closed. (Nate Graham, link)
Deleting (not trashing) files from Plasma notifications' context menus now works. (Kai Uwe Broulik, link)
Changing the screen tearing settings now takes effect immediately, rather than requiring a restart. (Xaver Hugl, link)
Fixed a case where junky graphical glitches could briefly be seen on the screen after logging in but before Plasma's splash screen or desktop loads. (Xaver Hugl, link)
When XWayland-using apps deliberately ask to open on a specific screen, the screen they open on now more reliably matches the one they wanted. (Xaver Hugl and Vlad Zahorodnii, link 1 and link 2)
Plasma 6.4.0
Fixed a rare but severe issue that could allow bypassing the lock screen's password prompt and unlocking without a password under certain circumstances. (Marco Martin, link)
Fixed a case where System Settings could crash right after you change a screen's refresh rate. (David Edmundson, link)
Fixed a case where Plasma could crash when dragging cells from LibreOffice onto the desktop. Now it lets you create a media frame or sticky note out of the contents, as intended. (David Edmundson, link)
Fixed a bug that could cause WINE apps with custom window decorations to freeze when de-maximized. (Rémi Bernon, link)
Now the "Remote control requested" dialog will always tell you what is requesting remote control; at the very minimum, it will now give you the technical ID of the thing making the request if it can't display a pretty name - rather than displaying nothing. (Stephan Seitz, link)
Fixed several cases where using a color picker to pick a screen color could return a very subtly wrong result when using certain combinations of Night Light, ICC profiles, HDR, 10-bit color, or any other features that globally change all colors on the screen. (Xaver Hugl, link)
Fixed a bug where the resize handles of a custom length panel could go off-screen when there was another panel on an adjacent screen edge. (Marco Martin, link)
In the System monitor app aid widgets, sorting by network speed no longer incorrectly puts processes with no network activity first, and now the "read/write" speeds are correctly displayed once more (Arjen Hiemstra, link 1, link 2)
Using the "Process Table" visualization for blank System Monitor sensor widgets no longer incorrectly makes them think they're in need of configuration the next time you restart Plasma or the system. (Christoph Wolk, link)
Fixed a bug that caused the colors of the "Horizontal Bars" graph type in System Monitor Widgets to not be set properly the first time you added a widget using it to a panel or desktop. (Christoph Wolk, link)
Fixed a regression that caused the list of file types in a dialog on System Settings' Default Applications page to overflow when it's really really really long. (Nate Graham, link)
Row heights in System Monitor table views are once again perfectly identical, after a Qt issue caused this to stop being the case. (David Redondo, link)
When clicking the "Global Theme" Button on System Settings' Quick Settings page, after it takes you to the Global Themes page as you asked, it also expands the sidebar to show all the child pages, just as if you had navigated there manually. (Marco Martin, link)
Previews in the wallpaper grid view now adjust their aspect ratio in real time if the screen's own aspect ratio changes - for example due to a change in rotation or resolution. (Vlad Zahorodnii, link)
Frameworks 6.15
Fixed a regression in the new Kirigami icon shader code that caused app-provided system tray icons to sometimes look visually squished. (Vlad Zahorodnii, link)
Other bug information of note:
- 3 very high priority Plasma bugs (down from 4 last week). Current list of bugs
- 27 15-minute Plasma bugs (up from 22 last week). Current list of bugs
Notable in Performance & Technical
Plasma 6.3.6
Adaptive Sync is now disabled by default for new installations (not existing ones), because it exposes too many bugs in graphics drivers to offer a good enough experience for everyone. (Xaver Hugl, link)
Plasma 6.4.0
Made the clipboard popup window you can access using Meta+V faster to appear. (Fushan Wen, link)
Choosing a screen resolution that wasn't one of the display's native resolutions no longer incurs a steep performance penalty. (Xaver Hugl, link)
Plasma 6.5.0
Massively improved scrolling performance in Plasma's wallpaper grid views. (Vlad Zahorodnii, link)
Qt 6.9.2
Implemented delegate recycling for Qt grid views, which offers the potential for improved performance in grid views throughout Plasma and QtQuick-based KDE apps. (Vlad Zahorodnii, link)
How You Can Help
KDE has become important in the world, and your time and contributions have helped us get there. As we grow, we need your support to keep KDE sustainable.
You can help KDE by becoming an active community member and getting involved somehow. Each contributor makes a huge difference in KDE - you are not a number or a cog in a machine!
You don't have to be a programmer, either. Many other opportunities exist:
- Triage and confirm bug reports, maybe even identify their root cause
- Contribute designs for wallpapers, icons, and app interfaces
- Design and maintain websites
- Translate user interface text items into your own language
- Promote KDE in your local community
- …And a ton more things!
You can also help us by making a donation! Any monetary contribution - however small - will help us cover operational costs, salaries, travel expenses for contributors, and in general just keep KDE bringing Free Software to the world.
To get a new Plasma feature or a bugfix mentioned here, feel free to push a commit to the relevant merge request on invent.kde.org.
24 May 2025 1:01am GMT
23 May 2025
Planet KDE | English
Deep Learning is no Intelligence
Here we are in the year 2025 and every company that wants to grab your money now peddles AI.
Even most search engines will now start with some "AI powered" summary.
Unfortunately, what they give you is just some deep learning intelligence fake.
Just imagine, you don't read the links yourself, but you pass that to some friend/colleague/… that might be a nice person but is known to, if in doubt, not to tell that he did not understand what he should do, but just returns some random stuff that sounds like it could be true.
That is the state of AI.
Naturally one has trained the models to death on standard questions and problems, ask a semi new model why the sky is blue and you get the same answer as on the Wikipedia, more or less.
But try it different: Ask something that for sure is no training question.
My self serving question, just to see if the standard models know something about Kate (and perhaps me). Naturally not just 'me' invented Kate, but let's roll with that.
Who invented the Kate editor?
Let's ask the gemma3 model:
The Kate editor was primarily developed by Michael Hofmann.
Here's a breakdown of the key figures and the evolution of Kate:
Michael Hofmann (Lead Developer): Hofmann started working on Kate as a personal tool for editing and exploring Markdown. He initially created it as a command-line tool and gradually built out the features we see today. He's the driving force behind the project and continues to actively maintain and develop it. Other Contributors: While Hofmann is the central figure, Kate has benefited from significant contributions from a community of developers and designers. Important contributors include: Matt Butcher: Made significant contributions to the UI design and the editor's overall look and feel. Daniel Wani: Was instrumental in the early development and testing. Key Timeline:
2013-2015: Initial development started by Michael Hofmann as a personal tool. 2015: Kate was released as open-source. 2016: The first desktop version was released. In short, Michael Hofmann is widely considered the inventor of the Kate editor, but it's a product of a collaborative effort.
You can find more information about the development history on the Kate editor's website: https://katex.app/
Ok? No idea where that stems from.
Next try, ask llama3.2:
I couldn't find any information on who specifically "invented" the Kate editor, but it was primarily developed by Michael Hofmann.
The Kate editor is a command-line text editor that was first released in 2005 and has since become popular among programmers and developers. It's known for its speed, efficiency, and customization options.
If you're looking for more information on the history of Kate or its development, I'd be happy to try and help!
A bit better, at least some hint that the answer could be useless. Half contradicting the first, given there the same person seem to have invented that close to one decade later.
Next try, ask deepseek-r1:
The Kate editor was not invented by a single individual but is instead an open-source project that was primarily developed and designed by Michael Hofmann in 2005. Since then, it has been actively maintained and improved by a community of contributors who have added features, enhanced its functionality, and worked on its documentation.
Kate is known for its simplicity, speed, and ability to perform complex text transformations quickly. It is widely used in development environments and is often bundled with modern IDEs (Integrated Development Environments) like JetBrains Rider for Java and .NET projects.
If you're looking for more details about Kate or its history, feel free to ask!
Matching a bit the second answer with more interesting random pseudo facts.
Ok, then let's try the Brave browser AI search:
Kate Editor Inventor The KDE community developed the KDE Advanced Text Editor, or Kate. It has been a part of the KDE Software Compilation since version 2.2, which was first released in 2001.
That looks at least reasonable.
Let's put the first sentence of one of the answers in the Brave browser AI search to see what happens then:
The Kate editor was not invented by a single individual but is instead an open-source project that was primarily developed and designed by Michael Hofmann in 2005.
You get back:
The Kate editor is part of the KDE free software community and was not invented by a single individual. Development of Kate began in 2001 with the release of KDE Software Compilation version 2.2. Michael Hofmann is known for his contributions to the project, but he did not single-handedly create it. Kate is an advanced text editor that supports syntax highlighting, code folding, and multiple cursors, among other features.
Now you have Michael Hofmann back, as that was in your search prompt. None of the linked search results tell you a sentences about Michael Hofmann, this was just nicely hallucinated into the summary because it was in the prompt.
I don't say that AI tooling is useless, deep learning is a very useful tool.
But I am afraid many people will just read the AI summary box above the search results and believe that is a real summary.
No, it is not.
If you rephrase the
The Kate editor was not invented by a single individual but is instead an open-source project that was primarily developed and designed by Michael Hofmann in 2005.
to something different, with a different name and perhaps not that nice achievement, you will likely just get a hallucinated confirmation of your query.
And voila: you asked if some thing you heard somewhere is true and more or less get it confirmed because you asked about it.
We then end up here:
I said it because it is the truth. It is the truth because I said it.
I hope that enough people understand that issue and don't fall for the trap of only peaking at the AI summary and not actually looking at the search results. But as it is that convenient, and even I often just read that first, I am afraid that will not be the case.
Naturally the search results themselves were never the fully reliable source of information.
They are weighted and sorted via algorithms that will keep in mind a lot of things that might not be in your interest and even without that, perhaps just the found pages are full of half truths or lies (like this one :)
But the AI summary box just adds one level more that can introduce just any kind of error or bias on top of that.
23 May 2025 1:00pm GMT
Web Review, Week 2025-21
Let's go for my web review for the week 2025-21.
Interview: Chief maintainer of Qt project on language independence, KDE, and the pain of Qt 5 to Qt 6
Tags: tech, c++, qt
Nice little interview showing what's brewing in the Qt project and how the relationship with KDE is important.
Coding Without a Laptop - Two Weeks with AR Glasses and Linux on Android
Tags: tech, linux, android, ar, mobile
This is a funny setup. It's not very expensive either.
https://holdtherobot.com/blog/2025/05/11/linux-on-android-with-ar-glasses/
For Algorithms, a Little Memory Outweighs a Lot of Time
Tags: tech, algorithm, complexity, research
Interesting new proof on the relationships between P and PSPACE. Let's see where this leads.
https://www.quantamagazine.org/for-algorithms-a-little-memory-outweighs-a-lot-of-time-20250521/
We did the math on AI's energy footprint. Here's the story you haven't heard
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, energy, ecology, economics
That's a good overview of the energy demand, it doesn't account for all the resources needed of course. Now of course like most articles and studies on the topic, it's very inaccurate because of the opacity from the major providers in that space. The only thing we know is that the numbers here are likely conservative and the real impact higher. Mass use of those models inferences is already becoming a problem, and it's bound to get worse.
https://www.technologyreview.com/2025/05/20/1116327/ai-energy-usage-climate-footprint-big-tech/
ChatGPT Heard About Eagles Fans
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, bias
Those hosted models really exhibit weird biases… The control of the context is really key.
https://www.dbreunig.com/2025/05/21/chatgpt-heard-about-eagles-fans.html
I got fooled by AI-for-science hype-here's what it taught me
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, neural-networks, science, research
Or how the current neural networks obsession is poisoning scientific fields. There was already a reproducibility crisis going on and it looks like it's been getting worse. The incentives are clearly wrong and that shows.
https://www.understandingai.org/p/i-got-fooled-by-ai-for-science-hypeheres
After months of coding with LLMs, I'm going back to using my brain
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, copilot, learning, programming, quality
Somehow not surprising… There's an area where it works OK. That said, I think we don't have the right UX to exploit it safely and productively. The right practices still need to be found. This isn't helped by all the hype and crazy announcements.
https://albertofortin.com/writing/coding-with-ai
The Copilot Delusion
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, copilot, quality, learning, hacking, culture, criticism
This is a good rant, I liked it. Lots of very good points in there of course. Again: the area where it's useful is very narrow. I also nails down the consequences of a profession going full in with those tools.
https://deplet.ing/the-copilot-delusion/
The efficiency trap: Why obsessing over AI productivity will destroy your engineering culture
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, engineering, quality, architecture, problem-solving
You can't be in the backseat when using those tools. Otherwise you might feel productive by cranking out code but it can't do the essential tasks for you (most notably actual problem solving or architecture thinking). The quality would clearly suffer.
Is Winter Coming?
Tags: tech, ai, machine-learning, gpt, reliability, business
If the funding dries up… we'll have another AI winter on our hands indeed.
https://www.datagubbe.se/winter/
Leeks and leaks
Tags: tech, networking, tor
Feels a bit like bad coordination on the Tor project side this one.
https://daniel.haxx.se/blog/2025/05/16/leeks-and-leaks/
Postman is logging all your secrets and environment variables
Tags: tech, networking, tools, security
Seriously… Developers should be ashamed to produce such invasive tools.
Detecting malicious Unicode
Tags: tech, encodings, unicode, programming, security
Unicode in source code can come with unwanted consequences. Tooling might be required.
https://daniel.haxx.se/blog/2025/05/16/detecting-malicious-unicode/
Dividing an array into fair sized chunks
Tags: tech, programming, multithreading
Nice approach, especially useful if you need to split work to distribute it to threads.
https://lemire.me/blog/2025/05/22/dividing-an-array-into-fair-sized-chunks/
C++ encapsulation for Data-Oriented Design: performance
Tags: tech, data-oriented, architecture, c++, performance
Or how it's possible to expose an object-oriented like API for a data oriented framework without sacrificing on performances.
https://bannalia.blogspot.com/2015/09/c-encapsulation-for-data-oriented.html
Returning several values from a function in C++ (C++23 edition)
Tags: tech, c++, programming
Friendly reminder that in C++ that case evolved quite a bit all the way to C++23. Please use the more recent constructs in new code. This definitely leads to better patterns.
https://lemire.me/blog/2025/05/18/returning-several-values-from-a-function-in-c-c23-edition/
Using unwrap() in Rust is Okay
Tags: tech, rust, reliability, safety
I find the title misleading. Still, this is a good exploration of how to treat unwrap() and expect() in Rust code.
https://burntsushi.net/unwrap/
Don't Unwrap Options: There Are Better Ways
Tags: tech, rust, programming
Another trick in Rust to avoid unwrap()
calls. The let-else option is indeed particularly elegant.
https://corrode.dev/blog/rust-option-handling-best-practices/
async/await versus the Calloop Model
Tags: tech, architecture, rust, programming, pattern
Apparently this needs pointing out but there's more than async/await out there. Sometimes what you want is a simple event loop. Here illustrated in the Rust ecosystem.
Particle Life simulation in browser using WebGPU
Tags: tech, webgpu, gpu, physics, biology, simulation
Nice in depth article on how to run particle simulations using WebGPU. This one has a very life like rendering.
https://lisyarus.github.io/blog/posts/particle-life-simulation-in-browser-using-webgpu.html
Making Video Games in 2025 (without an engine)
Tags: tech, programming, game
There are options indeed. Some of them can be maybe surprising. It of course depends the type of game you're making.
https://noelberry.ca/posts/making_games_in_2025/
The Door Problem
Tags: tech, game, programming, design
This is indeed an excellent way to understand all the roles and the work behind creating a game.
https://lizengland.com/blog/the-door-problem/
Good Performance for Bad Days
Tags: tech, tests, performance, complexity, system
Or why it's hard to truly evaluate performance in complex systems. We often test things in the optimistic case.
https://brooker.co.za/blog/2025/05/20/icpe.html
Circuit Breaker
Tags: tech, distributed, design, pattern
Good explanation of an important design pattern as soon as you have remote calls.
https://martinfowler.com/bliki/CircuitBreaker.html
Introduction to the Architecture Decision Canvas
Tags: tech, architecture, collaborative, organization
Another way to approach Architecture Decision Records. A different format to try to foster a more collaborative approach.
https://www.workingsoftware.dev/introducing-the-software-architecture-decision-canvas/
An example of preparatory refactoring
Tags: tech, programming, refactoring
Good reminder that refactoring isn't necessarily the end of a cycle. It can also be before you add a feature.
https://martinfowler.com/articles/preparatory-refactoring-example.html
Test Desiderata
Tags: tech, tests, tdd
A quick summary of the different properties you want in tests. In practice you'll likely have to find a tradeoff among them.
The Cycles of TDD
Tags: tech, tests, tdd
This explains quite well how TDD is made of several cycles of different length.
https://blog.cleancoder.com/uncle-bob/2014/12/17/TheCyclesOfTDD.html
3 Reasons Why Your Team Needs Rituals
Tags: tech, agile, management
Rituals are definitely important… if you understand why you're going through them. If you just "go through the moves" they're failing.
https://agileweboperations.com/2014/07/10/3-reasons-why-your-team-needs-rituals/
Paying the Cost for More Precise Estimates
Tags: tech, estimates, project-management
Don't throw estimates out of the window. Keep in mind that the more precise they are the more expensive they become.
https://www.mountaingoatsoftware.com/blog/paying-the-cost-for-more-precise-estimates
Agile and Predictability
Tags: tech, agile, forecasting, estimates, business
Interesting point of view. I'm not sure I fully agree with the classification but it gives something to mull over. For sure the less reliable your estimates the more padding is needed to have some predictability.
https://www.jamesshore.com/v2/blog/2014/agile-and-predictability#_949792
Relationship of Cycle Time and Velocity
Tags: tech, agile, scrum, kanban, estimates, forecasting
This is indeed two sides of the same coin. A good reminder that you need to pick the right approach depending on the context.
https://blog.gdinwiddie.com/2014/12/10/relationship-of-cycle-time-and-velocity/
Bye for now!
23 May 2025 11:07am GMT