Key Stats
In the past week, our Linux forums had the following activity and key statistics:
- Total New Posts: 227
- Total New Topics: 25
Top Members
- @hydn: 41 posts, 125 likes received
- @tkn: 27 posts, 82 likes received
- @ericmarceau: 23 posts, 61 likes received
- @ugnvs: 15 posts, 55 likes received
- @pavlos: 8 posts, 35 likes received
- @Jymm: 10 posts, 35 likes received
- @Brian_Masinick: 14 posts, 34 likes received
- @ricmarques: 8 posts, 31 likes received
- @Blue_bird: 8 posts, 30 likes received
- @guiverc: 6 posts, 29 likes received
Interesting Topics
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Ubuntu 26.04 LTS (“Resolute Raccoon”) - and most of its flavors - released yesterday (23rd April 2026)
In Ubuntu, @ricmarques rounded up the official release posts and highlights for 26.04 LTS, while @guiverc pointed out that Ubuntu Unity is treating 26.04 like an LTS even if it’s not designated as such. Members also shared early install notes and impressions from Xubuntu and others. -
Which is “better” for ease of control - iptables and nftables?
@ericmarceau started a thoughtful comparison in General Discussions focused on real-world manageability rather than pure theory. @hydn urged prioritizing nftables since it’s the present and future on most distros, and @ugnvs shared a concise side‑by‑side resource for quick evaluation. The thread also weighed where UFW fits for simpler workflows. -
Basic pixel graphics in Python helper (SDL)
In Showcase, @ugnvs shared a compact Python helper that wraps pygame‑ce/SDL so you can draw pixels with a simple call. The post includes usage notes and licensing, and @pavlos highlighted the clean, readable approach for quick visual prototyping. -
Framework Laptop 13 Pro
@Halano kicked off a General Discussions conversation about Framework’s 2026 13 Pro. Members liked the repairability and parts ecosystem. @hydn called out the 3:2 2880×1920 display as great for code and config editing, while @tkn and @Halano discussed pricing and the need for more mid‑tier options. -
Running a VM like a dual-boot setup
In General Discussions, @jaymo_chicago explored achieving near‑native performance for a secondary OS in a VM on a 6 GB RAM laptop. @hydn suggested keeping both desktops installed on bare metal as the simplest path and shared a reference for VM’ing a dual‑boot. @ericmarceau added the idea of tuning with cgroups, and @jaymo_chicago reported surprisingly smooth results giving the MATE VM 3 GB RAM. -
Security - Repository of IP address lists - Country-specific
Also in Showcase, @ericmarceau shared curated sources for country and geo‑IP blocklists that can feed iptables/ipset or pfSense workflows. @ugnvs and @hydn discussed why CDNs and anycast obscure geolocation, and how these lists are still useful for broad SSH and brute‑force mitigation at home. -
Generate password
In MATE Desktop, @pavlos kicked off a handy thread of one‑liners and tools for quick password generation. Highlights includeopenssl rand -base64,pwgen, a classic/dev/urandomfilter, plus @ricmarques and @ugnvs clarifying how UUID v4 works and what “random” really means in that context. -
Whats the main reasons why you use MATE (or other DE/WM)
@Brian_Masinick invited MATE fans to explain their preferences in General Discussions. @tkn praised on‑the‑fly compositing toggles and low overhead, @Jymm emphasized stability and a classic workflow, @ClaudioDC contrasted setup flexibility with XFCE, and @ericmarceau described disabling animations to prioritize immediate, no‑delay interactions. -
Ata1: SRST failed (error-16)
A Linux Support troubleshooting thread where @tkn offered practical triage steps for isolating harmless USB noise and shared a resource for slow boots, while @ericmarceau demonstrated how to apply USB storage quirks via GRUB kernel parameters, including how to identify the right device IDs withlsusb. -
How AI revolution impacts Linux world?
A fresh General Discussions discussion opened over the weekend on what AI might mean for Linux distributions and workflows. Early reactions, like @tkn’s, voice caution about bloat and automation intruding on user control, setting the stage for a timely debate as AI tooling accelerates.
Activity by the @staff Group
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Go cert-checker
@toadie shipped updates to the Go certificate checker adding JSON export, file and list inputs, and interactive or flag‑based modes. The project also sparked an investigation into a third‑party showcase site invitation, with @ugnvs providing quick due diligence and @tkn raising a smart question about ownership wording. -
Electronic fair in Pordenone ~ impressions
@ricky89 shared a field report in General Discussions from Italy’s large electronics fair, including practical buying decisions, a fun “terminal puzzle” anecdote, and a few frugal pickups. It’s a nice slice of IRL Linux‑adjacent culture from a staff voice. -
Sruthi Chandran Elected as Debian’s Project Leader
@hydn highlighted the Debian 2026 DPL transition with links to the platform and results. A worthy milestone for the Debian community that underpins so many of our favorite systems. -
Linux Filesystem Hierarchy Explained: What Every Directory Actually Does
In Articles & guides, @hydn published a practical explainer walking through the top‑level directories, what they’re for, and how that knowledge speeds up troubleshooting and administration on any distro.
Best Reply or Topic of the Week
- Best Reply: @guiverc’s primer on Qt, KDE Frameworks, and LXQt differences in Looking for comments - Differences between Qt on KDE vs LxQt on Lubuntu
Why it stands out: It clearly separates what Qt provides from what KDE Frameworks add, explains how Kubuntu and Lubuntu use the same Qt stack but diverge to meet different goals, and ties it back to Ubuntu’s packaging process. It’s the kind of concise, high‑signal answer that helps readers make smarter desktop and toolkit choices without confusion.
Thanks for reading. See you again next week! ![]()
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