9to5linux.com

Link, to linux in Mozilla Firefox 119 Is Now Available for Download, Here's What's New

Slightly odd they are opting to gradually roll out several features this release.

If they aren’t ready then maybe push them back to the next release?

TrickDacy,

Or they are learning from other apps that do this all the time to great success

Link,

Such as? I don’t know many open source apps doing this.

TrickDacy,

Why does it need to be limited to open source? A lot of the biggest apps out there typically roll out features slowly. I feel like once Facebook started doing it, it became widespread

yukijoou, to linux in Mozilla Firefox 119 Is Now Available for Download, Here's What's New

my list of cool features:

Gradually rolling out in Fx119, Firefox now allows you to edit PDFs by adding images and alt text, in addition to text and drawings.

If you’re migrating your data from Chrome, Firefox now offers the ability to import some of your extensions as well.

As part of Total Cookie Protection, Firefox now supports the partitioning of Blob URLs, this mitigates a potential tracking vector that third-party agents could use to track an individual.

The visibility of fonts to websites has been restricted to system fonts and language pack fonts in Enhanced Tracking Protection strict mode to mitigate font fingerprinting.

Encrypted Client Hello (ECH) is now available to Firefox users, delivering a more private browsing experience. ECH extends the encryption used in TLS connections to cover more of the handshake and better protect sensitive fields.

Firefox is now available in the Santali (sat) language.

Several enhancements have been made to the Inactive CSS styles feature. This feature assists in identifying CSS properties that have no effect on an element. Pseudo-elements such as ::first-letter, ::cue, and ::placeholder are now fully supported.

The JSON viewer is particularly useful for debugging REST APIs, as it displays formatted JSON responses. Now, if the JSON is invalid or broken, it automatically switches to a raw data view, improving the user experience.

Grouping of items in an array (and iterables) is now easier by using the methods Object.groupBy or Map.groupBy.

Pantherina,
@Pantherina@feddit.de avatar

Hmm, only system fonts doesnt seem to help? Wouldnt that circumvent having the browser in a fake environment like Torbrowser does that, with the same fonts?

elbarto777,

Torbrowser is based in Firefox, but it could make sure that its anti-tracking mechanisms keep working.

tun, to linux in Mozilla Firefox 119 Is Now Available for Download, Here's What's New

If you’re migrating your data from Chrome, Firefox now offers the ability to import some of your extensions as well.

Nice.

footox, to linux in Mozilla Firefox 119 is Now Available for Download, Here's What's New

I didn’t realize Firefox let you add text to PDFs already!

joyjoy, to linux in Mozilla Firefox 119 is Now Available for Download, Here's What's New

This is the beta. The full release is tomorrow.

OsrsNeedsF2P, to linux in Mozilla Firefox 119 is Now Available for Download, Here's What's New
Darken, (edited ) to linux in VLC 3.0.19 Improves AV1 HDR Support with Software Decoding, Fixes Linux Issues
@Darken@reddthat.com avatar

I’m waiting for the update that makes the UI UX actually nice

QuazarOmega, (edited )

Learn how Waydroid users improve VLC's UI with this one weird trickInstalling the Android version

(Jk, but the Android UI really does look much nicer out of the box since it has to follow some semblance of design guidelines)

YIj54yALOJxEsY20eU, (edited )

Someone with relatively little technical skills could do that type of work. Give it a shot!

Franzia,

This sort of attitude is completely new to me and so awesome. Like I can just contribute to software? 🤯

I have choice words for the UI/UX of most Matrix clients. And they’re open source!

atetulo,

Good. Those things need work.

But expect a lot of your complaints to fall on deaf ears unless you’re willing to do the work yourself.

A lot of people in the open source ecosystem really don’t understand good design.

VLC, however, is one that does.

Franzia,

I really like design! Little buttons and colors and all those bits of tweaking. I’ve been looking more at projects on Lemmy to see how their UIs are coded, but I think the tools and frameworks all sorta run back to HTML/CSS/JavaScript so like if I learned that then I’d understand how to use Qt, PyQt, or Kotlin. Idk. I think designers tend to contract themselves to capital so the idea of an open source UI developer sounds goofy, but fun.

QuazarOmega,

How? They would have to know C/C++, Qt, QML; then learn how to navigate the codebase, compile the software and debug it.
All that is very technical

YIj54yALOJxEsY20eU, (edited )

Far less technical than AV1 support with software rendering, very little technical skills relatively.

ReakDuck,

Its still a high technical skill you ask there. Its just a different field

QuazarOmega, (edited )

Uh sure, relatively, but for someone who doesn’t even know how to program that’s relatively a super tall order, I don’t know their background, but the activity itself definitely isn’t low technical requirements in absolute terms, if instead you meant UI concept design, then it would have been more plausible

YIj54yALOJxEsY20eU,

Good thing I just clarified it was relatively, not sure why you felt the need to type this comment

prole, (edited )

I had to get a plug-in to add click to play/pause so it’s like almost every streaming site. Also, I don’t believe there’s a way to get it to automatically play the next video file in the folder after one video finished, without making a playlist.

Small gripes, I know. I’m coming from MPC on Windows so I miss some of those features.

atetulo,

Looks great to me.

TheAnonymouseJoker,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

That update has existed nearly since VLC was made. It is called custom skin. VLC allows to use skins.

Darken, (edited )
@Darken@reddthat.com avatar

Customization is great however most people barely open any of the menus even tho they contain treasures

In any case, the current UI is not bad by any means

TheAnonymouseJoker,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

I do not care about the UI unless it is incomprehensibly ugly and intolerable, or has missing key buttons I need. VLC does not have that problem, and my UI demands are very low unless its a complex software like file manager or video/audio/photo editing tool.

GustavoM, to linux in Raspberry Pi OS Is Now Based on Debian Bookworm, Supports Raspberry Pi 5
@GustavoM@lemmy.world avatar

Lookin’ great! Can’t wait to play w/ it.

datelmd5sum,
GustavoM,
@GustavoM@lemmy.world avatar
everett, to linux in How To Upgrade Raspberry Pi OS to Debian Bookworm from Bullseye

This should address the official recommendation that users don’t update from Bullseye to Bookworm, but instead do a fresh install. But no, just a low-effort how-to.

TrojanHam, to linux in How To Upgrade Raspberry Pi OS to Debian Bookworm from Bullseye
@TrojanHam@sh.itjust.works avatar

Basically, it’s the same upgrade procedure as Debian’s with the added step of editing rasp.list.

vort3, to linux in VLC 3.0.19 Improves AV1 HDR Support with Software Decoding, Fixes Linux Issues
@vort3@lemmy.ml avatar

The best part about this update is that you can actually watch youtube videos in VLC again.

AdmiralShat, to linux_gaming in Proton 8.0-4 Released with Support for More Windows Games on Linux

How well does proton work on Nvidia GPUs now days?

I’m really tried of windows as a whole and would like to get away from that ecosystem. There’s really nothing keeping me there other than I’ve been told gaming on Nvidia is still way behind, but that might have changed

Lorgres,

Up until recently I was using a gtx 1060 just fine. Not sure about the high end ray tracing stuff though.

I’d say give it a try, I had a great experience. Never had any proton issues with an nvidia card my self. Just keep in mind nvidia drivers on Linux are notorious for being bad. If you choose an LTS distro or one that packages the drivers you’ll be fine though. Pop!_OS LTS with the nvidia drivers is what I ran.

cybersandwich,

It works great. It’s usually not proton that’s the issue. Iirc the drivers tend to lag behind a little bit and it really depends on your distribution’s maintainers for how quickly and seamlessly the newest drivers are made available. PopOS is one of the best(imo the best) for Nvidia support.

I had a 3070ti (that I sort of regret swapping for a 6700xt) that worked really well. I swapped because I bought into the myth that “Nvidia sucks on Linux” and I figured if my 3070ti was this good, then a Radeon card would be even better. I just traded small nvidia issues for more annoying Radeon issues and, for me, I got the bad end of the deal. I miss CUDA and the nvenc encoder. Radeons equivalents are 5 years behind it feels like and/or the open source driver that people rave about doesn’t support them, so you have to use the proprietary driver which isn’t as good for gaming.

All that to say, don’t let having an Nvidia card hold you back.

batmangrundies,

Yeah I just wish NVIDIA would roll out updated drivers more frequently. Would be nice to have ray reconstruction working in Cyberpunk for instance. There are also some issues with the DLSS implementation in Cyberpunk and the current drivers.

For work though I have no complaints. And if you’re a patient gamer who is happy to work through old titles or whatever between driver updates then you’re probably not going to be too distraught.

And of course if more people use Linux, driver support should improve.

be_excellent_to_each_other,
@be_excellent_to_each_other@kbin.social avatar

Was running an RTX2080 on for a couple years until just recently when I gave the system to a relative. More stuff worked than didn't by far. As someone else said, it's been at the point for awhile where I just assumed anything I wanted to run would work. Not literally everything does, so if you have one game that you must have, it could be worth a google search to see what folks are saying.

warmaster,

Proton with NVIDIA is fine. The issue is NVIDIA drivers for Linux when using Wayland (the compositor for your user session)

If you stick with the old compositor called XORG/X11, Nvidia drivers are more stable but you won’t ever get VRR, HDR or fractional scaling.

AdmiralShat,

I don’t use VRR nor HDR so that actually works fine for me.

Sentau,

Gsync works with x11 if I remember correctly

patatahooligan, (edited )
@patatahooligan@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t know of anything about nvidia being “way behind”, apart from wayland support. The only case I can think of the top of my head where the bad wayland support comes into play is if you have multiple monitors with different refresh rates. But maybe even that is not an issue anymore with new nvidia drivers. Maybe others can comment on it as I no longer have an nvidia card to check.

Use protondb to check whether your games play well on proton. It shows each commenter’s system specs as well, so you can see if a game has issues on nvidia specifically.

www.protondb.com

One warning: don’t try to install software, including the nvidia driver, as you would on windows. On linux, you don’t go and download it from nvidia’s website, you get it from your distro’s package repositories, and you let it get updated automatically via your system updates. Depending on the distro you install, it might be as easy as checking a tickbox to automatically install “Additional drivers” or “Proprietary drivers” during installation.

EDIT: I assumed “way behind” to mean that nvidia is behind amd on linux. If you meant how much linux gaming is behind in general, that’s another story. Linux does tend to lag behind in implementing newer features like newer DLSS versions. If you’re worried about this, then perhaps you will get more information if you post a question about what specifically you care about.

FalseDiamond,
@FalseDiamond@sh.itjust.works avatar

I am this exact case and it’s getting better. A month ago I installed Arch on my Nvidia desktop and it had multiple problems: returning from sleep, really bad cursor lag hitches, video would freeze at random, applications would flicker, etc. Nowadays most of it is gone, unfortunately the really bad freezes after changing resolution on monitors are still there though

lemillionsocks,
@lemillionsocks@beehaw.org avatar

From what Ive heard the issues with Nvidia on linux are less about proton not working and more about the closed source drivers being a little more effort to install, and causing issues with more bleeding edge and rolling distros because nvidia drags its feet on supporting the newer features and standards. Plenty of people use Nvidia on linux and it does come with benefits as well such as better video decoding and encoding, better work drivers, and since its not foss they can just support HDMI 2.1’s closed nonsense without having to worry about stepping on toes.

I dont use Nvidia so I cant say for sure but I feel like the solution to the typical “oh no I ran an update and everything is broken!” is to just use a stable/lts distro.

moody,

To simplify what’s been said already, if your nvidia card is working on Linux in your system, it will work fine with Proton.

init,

I have an Nvidia 2060 Super with Pop_OS driver version 535.xx(?), and I haven’t run into a game proton doesn’t work with.

umbrella, (edited )

i have more choppiness on the desktop, booting takes longer, and a few more annoyances here and there.

gaming usually works well.

its not ideal and a few details are out of place but is perfectly usable. they have a better oss driver on the works too.

nothing but bad experience running an nvidia laptop though so be wary of that

macallik, to linux in Debian 12.2 “Bookworm” Released with 117 Bug Fixes and 52 Security Updates

Just updated, thanks for sharing!

Rognaut, to linux_gaming in Proton 8.0-4 Released with Support for More Windows Games on Linux

I play a lot of these games. Is this the kick I need to switch off Windows? That and the endless self promoting from Microsoft.

tok3n,
@tok3n@lemmy.world avatar

Yes

Father_Redbeard,
@Father_Redbeard@lemmy.ml avatar

Do it! I just did and I’m loving it.

Rognaut,

I’ve been using Raspbian and Lakka on some SBCs. But I’m not sure what distros to take the plunge with on my desktop running Intel 9th Gen and 2080 ti.

Father_Redbeard, (edited )
@Father_Redbeard@lemmy.ml avatar

I’m really liking Pop!_OS, but I am far from an expert. Big draw to me is that is very unWIndowslike as far as UI go. And the auto tiling is slick, but you can implement that on pretty much any distro I believe. I tried EndeavourOS as well, but since it’s Arch based it was a bit too different than what I’m used to. I have two VPS running Ubuntu 20.04 LTS and since Pop is Ubuntu based it was more familiar. Pop also has a Nvidia specific image.

The new Debian-based Mint looks neat as well, but for now I’m very content with Pop.

Patch,

If you’re using Raspbian, any of the Debian family will suit you.

Ubuntu is still an excellent choice, despite the hipster hate. It comes in many flavours.

Vanilla Debian is absolutely fine for Steam-based gaming.

Pop!_OS, Mint & Zorin all have big followings. There’s also MX.

Take your pick, really.

shitescalates,

Nothing unique about the release, proton gets better and better. There are some games however that will likely never work, because their studio or developer blocks it. Most of these are competitive shooters. As long as you are OK not playing these, any time is a good time.

Zuberi, to linux_gaming in Proton 8.0-4 Released with Support for More Windows Games on Linux
@Zuberi@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

CsGO 2 works better on linux than windows

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