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Mainline support for the and the devkit is progressing: puri.sm/posts/purisms-contribu

There's more queued up in -next already for 5.7

@purism

I really wanted to skip through songs easily on my when carrying it around, so i hacked up a simplistic media player widget for using the protocol (wip code, don't try this at home yet)

My patches for iio-sensor-proxy to support proximity sensors just got merged upstream: gitlab.freedesktop.org/hadess/ - thanks hadess !

The (mostly identical) code is already live on the with 0.2.0 making use of it.

wlr-output-power-management finally made it into wlr-protocols: github.com/swaywm/wlr-protocol 🚀

Thanks @emersion@octodon.social
for finishing up the wlroots side.

This will allow to notice screen blanks and trigger them. Compositor part side already done: source.puri.sm/Librem5/phoc/me

0.2.0 got released:

source.puri.sm/Librem5/phosh/-

featuring first quick settings (for battery, rotation and feedback), proximity sensor support and more ground work for better notifications and translation updates.

@purism

Based on @merge 's accelerometer work (lore.kernel.org/linux-iio/cove) and yesterday's work to hook iio-sensor-proxy into , enabling rotation is just a couple of more lines of code.

The video shows the devkit but it is the same for the phone. Please excuse the low video quality.

After adding proximity sensor-support to -sensor-proxy (gitlab.freedesktop.org/hadess/) and adding runtime-pm support for the chip used in the (and it's devkit) (lore.kernel.org/linux-iio/cove) we can now wire it up to to fade the screen and prevent keyboard input:

...and haptic feedback in calls when receiving a phone call on the (as yesterday (social.librem.one/@agx/1035611), the audio is important)

@rah @purism

The pictures of this video are not important, the audio track shows the 's haptic motor triggering on incoming chat messages in :

@haeckse @purism

The devkit driving it's internal panel via DSI and an external screen via HDMI at the same time.

's based compositor phoc now implements the necessary bits of the gtk-shell protocol to raise applications from the background when activated.

The video shows how the shell activates Settings multiple times while another application (the terminal) is in the foreground. The slight delay is caused by Settings taking a moment to figure out it's already running (source.puri.sm/Librem5/gnome-c)

This is part of phoc 0.1.5 (0.1.5 (source.puri.sm/Librem5/phoc/-/).

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