Want to play games from non-Steam launchers on your Steam Deck? Here's how.
Collabora Online is an open-source office built on LibreOffice Technology. It provides many features and one of the most useful is that Collabora provides real-time editing of Word documents, spreadsheets, presentations and etc.
We assume that you have a working instance of Nextcloud with the LAMPS stack since the Collabora must be integrated with it. If you do not know how to install it, please check our blog post about installing Nextcloud on Ubuntu 22.04.
Installing Collabora Online and integrating with Nextcloud is a straightforward process that may take up to 20 minutes. Let’s get started!
The Linux Foundation has a new free course on the edX platform for those who would like to learn about, and experiment with, RISC-V. A verified track, to earn a certificate of completion, is also available.
So I finally got around to finding the disc images and mounting them, to move the complete game data over.
Honestly, there’s not much on the discs that didn’t get re-released as Shareware. Some video cut-scenes and game music.
What I did come to find out is that there are still some tiny little issues with the supported games, and the fixes for these issues hasn’t made it back to the Stable branch, which is in the Flatpak.
On August 29th 2023, the Emmabuntüs Collective is happy to announce the release of the new Emmabuntüs Debian Edition 5 1.00 (32 and 64 bits), based on the Debian 12.1 Bookworm distribution and supporting both XFCE and LXQt desktop environments.
This distribution was originally designed to facilitate the reconditioning of computers donated to humanitarian organizations, starting with the Emmaüs communities (which is where the distribution’s name obviously comes from), to promote the discovery of GNU/Linux by beginners, as well as to extend the lifespan of computer hardware, in order to reduce the waste induced by the over-consumption of raw materials.
“All I’m saying is I’m selling addicting food, that’s it.”
A future Republican president who opposes Medicare drug price negotiations likely couldn't dismantle or ignore the process but could have some regulatory discretion to seek lower price cuts, experts told Axios.
We have released Qt 5.15.15 LTS for subscription license holders today. As a patch release, Qt 5.15.15 does not add any new functionality but provides bug fixes.
Confusion is spreading across the Carlisle Area School District, as students were left without the internet for an entire school day.
On Friday morning, district officials notified parents that its internet system was shut down due to a “possible security incident.” The potential security breach was discovered on Thursday afternoon.
Carlisle students remained in school for the day, however they were unable to use school laptops or iPads during the day. The school district also limited school access for parents and visitors.
Two north country hospitals have been targeted in a cyber attack, but officials say there appears to be no breach of patient information.
Officials say Carthage Area Hospital and Claxton Hepburn Medical Center in Ogdensburg discovered the incident Thursday at approximately 6 p.m.
As a precaution, the emergency rooms at Carthage and Claxton have been put on diversion, meaning other area hospitals have been notified and are prepared to receive patients as needed.
A school will be starting its new term six days late after it was targeted in a cyber-attack.
Parents were informed that the Highgate Wood School, in Montenotte Road, has become a victim of an attack that has prevented the school from accessing systems.
As a result, the start of the Crouch End secondary school’s term next Tuesday (September 5) has been delayed to September 11. The school has around 1,500 pupils aged 11 to 16.
The protected health information of some Indiana Medicaid members may have been compromised in a recent security breach involving Ohio-based CareSource.
Officials with the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration announced Friday that the breach of CareSource, a managed care entity, happened in late May and involved the personal information of more than 200,000 Hoosiers.
State officials say names, addresses, Social Security numbers, dates of birth, member health information and more for 212,193 Indiana Medicaid members were accessed through an application called MOVEit, used by CareSource.
The Lawrence Public Schools are working to recover $2.7 million in funds that were recently “frozen” when a staffer responded to a phishing email sent by scammers posing as a vendor for the school district, city officials said.
Mayor Brian A. DePeña’s office held an emergency meeting Thursday with informational technology specialists to discuss the security breach, according to DePeña’s spokesperson, Nestor Castillo.
According to an email obtained by abc27 from the Carlisle Area School District, the school was notified by federal government officials that its internet system has been infiltrated with ransomware.
Yesterday, DataBreaches reported on SNAtch Team and how they were not a ransomware gang or using what had been referred to as the Snatch locker or ransomware. In that report, DataBreaches included a description provided by their spokesperson about their attack on the South Africa Department of Defense — an attack that SANDF initially dismissed as “fake news” and now claims wasn’t a hack.
[...]
It appears that SANDF is either extremely incompetent in investigating the attack and exfiltration of so much data or they are just flat-out lying because they are embarrassed. Either way, the country’s citizenry is not well-served by a government that denies the reality of what happened or attempts to deflect responsibility for the poor security practices that facilitated it.
We’ve noted for years how there’s no limit of companies and organizations that over-collect data on your daily movement patterns, then fail to adequately secure that data. Whether it’s your mobile phone carrier, your smartphone maker, your favorite app, or a rotating crop of dodgy data brokers, our corrupt failure to pass even a baseline privacy law for the Internet era is the gift that keeps on giving.
As the cost of the climate crisis continues to rise and climate justice groups demand more government action to halt the heating of the planet, we speak with policy expert Rhiana Gunn-Wright, one of the architects of the Green New Deal. She says the Inflation Reduction Act championed by President Biden, which is the largest climate bill in U.S. history, has many provisions that “structurally leave out Black people.” She urges a more inclusive green transition that centers the needs of communities of color. “There is an increasing sort of narrative about the tension between justice and urgency that’s presenting a false choice.” Gunn-Wright’s latest essay, published in the new digital magazine Hammer & Hope, is titled “Our Green Transition May Leave Black People Behind.”
High inflation and fluctuations in financial markets have negatively affected the profitability of pension plans.€ Not only the riskier investments in the stock markets, but also the conservative investments in bonds hav ebeen affected, making the returns on pension plans either meager or€ even negative.€ Latvian Radio asks what can be done.
Average labour income in Lithuania grew by 12.3 per cent year-on-year and reached 1,980 euros a month, before taxes, in the second quarter of this year, according to the Social Insurance Fund SoDra. The fastest wage growth was reported in construction.
Countries with the highest yearly inflation rates included Slovakia (9.6 percent), Croatia (8.5 percent), and Austria (7.6 percent).
The year-on-year increase in the price of food hit 16.3 percent in March, a record-high level, but the rate has gradually started to fall since then.
Pakistani traders on Saturday went on strike against the soaring cost of living, including higher fuel and utility bills and record depreciation of the rupee against the dollar, which has led to widespread discontent among the public.
The traders pulled their shutters down across the country, while protesters burned tires on roads to express their anger.
The strike was called by ex-senator Sirajul Haq, who heads the religious political party Jamaat-e-Islami, and it was largely endorsed by trade and business bodies, market associations, lawyers associations and transporters.
Zebra Technologies, a maker of marking, tracking, and computer printing technologies, is laying off 700 employees, or more than 7% of its workforce. The job cuts are a significant reduction from the company's previous estimate of 2% to 3% of layoffs.
Cybersecurity giant Malwarebytes laid off 100 employees this week, the latest round of cuts in a year that has seen the company restructure and struggle to compete with larger rivals. The layoffs come just weeks after the company's chief product officer, chief information officer, and chief technology officer were let go.
The agenda will include laws such as public servants and the law enforcement in the financial sector.
Washington has gone to court to become a party to the salvage case involving the famous liner so it can stop any expedition it deems objectionable.
Plus: Meta revises controversial "dangerous organizations" policy, a win against civil asset forfeiture in Detroit, and more...
A federal judge in Texas halted a state law that requires internet users to verify their age through government identification in order to access online porn.
By guaranteeing five basic internet rights.
UK Justice Secretary Alex Chalk announced Wednesday that the UK will enact new laws to force criminals to attend their sentencings in court, with offenders potentially being subject to longer sentences. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak commented saying “Criminals shouldn’t be allowed to take the coward’s way out by refusing to face their victims in court.”
Many new state laws passed by Texas Republicans this spring are highly controversial.
As a man becomes the first to face the death penalty under one of the world’s harshest anti-LGBTQ+ laws, the community in Uganda is fighting back.
Advice that travelers to the U.S. “check relevant state and local laws” came in response to rules this year restricting transgender care, drag shows and sports participation.
Getting an abortion in Finland will become easier and faster as a law reform approved last year comes into force.
Imagine you’re watching a live political debate on your phone, streamed by your national public broadcaster. It’s painfully slow. You miss most of what the candidates say as the video freezes and the audio gets choppy.
You may have noticed that there’s a massive, bipartisan push afoot to pass “right to reform” laws in many states making it easier and cheaper to repair the things you buy.
Right to repair advocates have made significant gains across the US of late, but the latest challenge to the movement faces a challenge from a surprising place: the Church of Scientology.
In a letter filed earlier this month with the US Copyright Office regarding its triennial review of Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) Section 1201 exemptions, Author Services, Inc., which represents "the literary, theatrical and musical works of [Scientology founder] L. Ron Hubbard," opposed renewal of a subsection of 1201 that allows consumers to circumvent software locks in order to repair their devices.