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1859 posts latest post 2026-05-24
Publishing rhythm
May 2026 | 23 posts
Can't use System update - invalid signature when validating ASN.1 encoded signature Ā· Issue #1316 Ā· ublue-os/bazzite Describe the bug Hello, I installed the nvidia KDE version of bazzite just 2 days ago. Today I wanted to update to the most recent release, but unfortunately, I keep getting the following error: Pu... GitHub Ā· github.com [1] This fixed my bazzite update issues after the signing key was rotated recently. This team is killing it with such a great user experience. curl -sL https://fix.universal-blue.org/ | sudo bash Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://github.com/ublue-os/bazzite/issues/1316 [2]: /thoughts/
I like Textualize’s [1] project transcendent-textual [2]. Textual apps and libraries References: [1]: https://github.com/Textualize [2]: https://github.com/Textualize/transcendent-textual
Update Kconfig.shield rec by bravekarma Ā· WaylonWalker/zmk-config-ninepad@8b76b76 zmk configuration for ninpad keyboard. Contribute to WaylonWalker/zmk-config-ninepad development by creating an account on GitHub. GitHub Ā· github.com [1] This one space killed my whole config and held me back from learning zmk. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://github.com/WaylonWalker/zmk-config-ninepad/commit/8b76b76e2f094453aaf7ffe51bb405ce3a25a611 [2]: /thoughts/
[1] The trackball spinner looks sick here. I can imagine using that spinner like a scroll wheel. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: /static/https://kbd.news/DragonFruit-2178.html [2]: /thoughts/
[1] They had split ergo boards back in 1983??? WTF who the heck keeps these row stagger boards going. This board looks like endgame material, If this thing was more normal, it’d kill a whole section of the ergo mechanical keyboard industry for good reason. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: /static/https://kbd.news/NEC-M-System-1729.html [2]: /thoughts/
- This keyboard layout looks weird af the mix of column staggar and row stagger is wild. Not sure if its genius or an abomination. That solenoid though is absolutely wild though, I kinda want one TBH. and the clear plate with the diodes laid out on it in a herringbone pattern is a very nice touch. Note This post is a thought [1]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: /thoughts/
External Link stackoverflow.com [1] today I learned that there is an accessibility feature in chrome that allows you to place a text cursor anywhere on the page. I had accidentally done this and it drove me mad that it was there. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/75886276/text-cursor-bug-in-my-chrome-browser-that-causes-the-blinking-cursor-to-appear-e [2]: /thoughts/
- Hard to argue this take, happy to see that its at the top. With it being such an old language its amazing that it still holds this position, and not surprising that it has warts, and thing that have turn users off from wanting anything to do with it. timestamped in the link Note This post is a thought [1]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: /thoughts/
Command Line Interface Guidelines An open-source guide to help you write better command-line programs, taking traditional UNIX principles and updating them for the modern day. clig.dev [1] This is a pretty sick set of guidelines to help you write better cli programs, I’m definitely coming back to reading this one more in depth later. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://clig.dev/ [2]: /thoughts/
External Link fullystacked.net [1] You can explicitly make a script render blocking, nothing will be rendered until this js is ready. <script blocking="render" src="important.js" defer></script> Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://fullystacked.net/render-blocking-on-purpose/ [2]: /thoughts/
Remove Background Web - a Hugging Face Space by Xenova In-browser background removal huggingface.co [1] I’ve long been a user of remove.bg, and I just discovered that you can run this transformer right within your browser with no api limits. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://huggingface.co/spaces/Xenova/remove-background-web [2]: /thoughts/
Check out volfpeter [1] and their project fasthx [2]. FastAPI [3] server-side rendering with built-in HTMX [4] support. References: [1]: https://github.com/volfpeter [2]: https://github.com/volfpeter/fasthx [3]: /fastapi/ [4]: /htmx/
FastHX - FastHX volfpeter.github.io [1] Very interesting approach to htmx [2] and fast api. It uses separate decorators for returning template partials and json that can be stacked to include both options on a single route. The templates are explicitly set in the decorator. Separate decorators are used for full page and partial pages. I don’t see an example of full and partial pages being combined. I think the demo app must be behaving in a spa like fashion where it does not get all of the data when it calls index and index will ask for user-list. Definitely going to keep my eye on this project and ponder on it. from fastapi import FastAPI from fastapi.templating import Jinja2Templates from fasthx import Jinja from pydantic import BaseModel # Pydantic model of the data the example API is using. class User(BaseModel): first_name: str last_name: str # Create the app. app = FastAPI() # Create a FastAPI Jinja2Templates instance and use it to create a # FastHX Jinja instance that will serve as your decorator. jinja = Jinja(Jinja2Templates("templates")) @app.get("/") @jinja.page("index.html") def index() -> None: ... @app.get("/user-list") @jinja.hx("user-list.html") async...
FastHX - FastHX volfpeter.github.io [1] Very interesting approach to htmx [2] and fast api. It uses separate decorators for returning template partials and json that can be stacked to include both options on a single route. The templates are explicitly set in the decorator. Separate decorators are used for full page and partial pages. I don’t see an example of full and partial pages being combined. I think the demo app must be behaving in a spa like fashion where it does not get all of the data when it calls index and index will ask for user-list. Definitely going to keep my eye on this project and ponder on it. from fastapi import FastAPI from fastapi.templating import Jinja2Templates from fasthx import Jinja from pydantic import BaseModel # Pydantic model of the data the example API is using. class User(BaseModel): first_name: str last_name: str # Create the app. app = FastAPI() # Create a FastAPI Jinja2Templates instance and use it to create a # FastHX Jinja instance that will serve as your decorator. jinja = Jinja(Jinja2Templates("templates")) @app.get("/") @jinja.page("index.html") def index() -> None: ... @app.get("/user-list") @jinja.hx("user-list.html") async...
Pinout and Schematic - nice!nano Pinout and schematic for the nice!nano nicekeyboards.com [1] Pinout for nice!nano boards. Note that P0.15 means gpio port 0 pin 15, they can be referenced in zmk when setting column and row pins. #include <dt-bindings/zmk/matrix_transform.h> / { chosen { zmk,kscan = &default_kscan; zmk,matrix_transform = &default_transform; /delete-property/ zephyr,console; /delete-property/ zephyr,shell-uart; }; default_kscan: kscan { compatible = "zmk,kscan-gpio-matrix"; label = "default_kscan"; diode-direction = "col2row"; col-gpios = <&gpio0 31 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH> , <&gpio0 29 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH> , <&gpio0 2 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH> ; row-gpios = <&gpio1 15 (GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH | GPIO_PULL_DOWN)> , <&gpio1 13 (GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH | GPIO_PULL_DOWN)> , <&gpio1 11 (GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH | GPIO_PULL_DOWN)> ; }; default_transform: matrix_transform { compatible = "zmk,matrix-transform"; columns = <3>; rows = <3>; map = < RC(0,0) RC(0,1) RC(0,2) RC(1,0) RC(1,1) RC(1,2) RC(2,0) RC(2,1) RC(2,2) >; }; }; Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://nicekeyboard...
I’m impressed by shmux [1] from typecraft-dev [2]. the shell-script tmux management you didn’t know you needed. baby References: [1]: https://github.com/typecraft-dev/shmux [2]: https://github.com/typecraft-dev
I like iximiuz’s [1] project awesome-container-tinkering [2]. List of awesome tools to tinker with containers. References: [1]: https://github.com/iximiuz [2]: https://github.com/iximiuz/awesome-container-tinkering
External Link unix.stackexchange.com [1] today I learned that /dev/pts is a pseudo-tty. It amazes me how much linux is still built around things like hardware terminals. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/93531/what-is-stored-in-dev-pts-files-and-can-we-open-them [2]: /thoughts/
GitHub - svenstaro/miniserve: 🌟 For when you really just want to serve some files over HTTP right now! 🌟 For when you really just want to serve some files over HTTP right now! - svenstaro/miniserve GitHub Ā· github.com [1] miniserve is a sweet http server, replacement for python -m http.server. It’s fast, runs off a small binary, but why would I want to use it over something that already exists on most machines, because it includes a bunch of features like qr codes, pretty themes, and uploads. I’ve used python -m http.server many times to transfer files from one machine to another in a pinch, like at a family members house. But what if they have an android, windows, or something not easy to get a python repl running on, you can run miniserve and upload from their device rather than hosting from their device. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://github.com/svenstaro/miniserve [2]: /thoughts/
Looking for inspiration? miniserve [1] by svenstaro [2]. 🌟 For when you really just want to serve some files over HTTP right now! References: [1]: https://github.com/svenstaro/miniserve [2]: https://github.com/svenstaro