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@luvcraft @wildrikku @itchio It's cached, so if some instance managed to verify the link while it was still present it likely still shows it as green. Though it's probably not a lot of them if you removed it soon after saving the profile :)

@luvcraft @wildrikku @itchio It does not. It will disappear as soon as the profile gets refreshed, and it won't be visible from other instances that will have verified the link after changing the webpage URL back.

@mcc Uhm, what? Pretty sure GRUB_DEFAULT in /etc/default/grub is how you set the default entry, just like the comment states.

@devrtz @gehrke_test @purism @mobian upower already collects some stats and you can display them with gnome-power-statistics like here: social.librem.one/@dos/1103501

The default graphing resolution makes it useless though, we carry this patch in PureOS to make it usable: gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-p

HowTo: Getting a GPS fix inside a multi-story building:

@jc Depends, I've tested it in various conditions over last weeks. The module handles SBAS and can report its sats in GSV sentence - it works, although it takes it a while to decode its data. It's multi-constellation, so you get GLONASS (or BeiDou), QZSS and Galileo as well. So far I've managed to successfully inject GPS almanac & ephemerides and also Galileo ephemerides, so it's usually tracking 6-18 sats depending on conditions. It's poorly documented so it's not exactly straightforward :)

@tudza Yes, but guess what - someone had to implement it first!

Experimenting with utilizing assisted GNSS techniques on . Cold fix takes about 3 minutes in perfect conditions, but can easily take *much* longer otherwise - that's how GPS works. However, by downloading satellite data from the Internet instead of the sky it can go down to under a minute; sometimes even just a few seconds. Still a proof-of-concept at this point, but can already tell that catching a fix gets significantly easier this way:)

@devrtz We really ought to make it detect photo orientation 🙃

@Blort Taken with the default Millipixels, then developed with darktable. This is how it looked like straight from the camera app.

See dosowisko.net/l5/photos/ for more examples and details about processing.

Librem 5 has a much better sensor than PinePhone. PinePhone Pro's one seems similar, but AFAIK its drivers aren't very mature yet. Taking photos works reliably on Librem 5 for me.

One issue that I have had with my since day one has been the wireless hotspot. Off and on, I try to take the time to troubleshoot the issue. Today, I had some time and I am on call which is when I need it most so I started looking at it. It worked first time without issue!!!
The only problem is, was it fixed by an update since the last time I looked at it, or did I fix it last time and not know it.
If I fixed it, I don't know what I did because it's been a couple of weeks.

Today there was a great update of the #millipixels camera app for the #Librem5. Many thanks to all who worked on this.

Very nice that you can see the #gain, #exposure, #whitebalance, and #focus values in real time!

I was honestly getting really fed up with my #librem5 last week. It's been years now and it wasn't anywhere near as reliable as a phone should be. But then a few days ago a fix for modem-resume-after-suspend was pushed and the difference is night and day! I can finally pull my phone out of my pocket in a high-stress my-kid-throwing-tantrum-in-supermarket-and-I-don't-know-which-dogfood-to-buy situation and know that it will Just Work .

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