Bye, bye Opera … welcome Vivaldi

These are hard times regarding politics and IT. Present developments, in particular in the USA, in China and Russia have an indirect or direct impact on various types of IT-components – concerning e.g. production sites, quality, tariffs and prices, data control, digital privacy. We in Europe who have supported Opensource and Opensource-based applications for decades, can – in my opinion – not ignore tendencies both of dictatorial regimes and capitalistic tech-giants to control the future of IT in general, the production of IT-related products and the efforts to control and analyze more and more of user-generated traffic. Be it for the surveillance and control of citizens or to earn money via analyzing user profiles and spamming them indirectly with advertisement. Even more concerning is the growing power of a handful of companies and institutions over the development and the ultimate direction of AI. The risks in all of these sectors to harm digital privacy (aside of the un-social media) are growing.

But we Europeans should also have an eye on who invests in what – and whether such investments come from countries which support aggressors against European countries or the EU. We sometimes need to take a clear position. Better late than never as in my case.

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Opensuse Leap 15.5 – KDE Plasma on Wayland – Nvidia driver, Opera, Chromium, Libreoffice, StandBy

Some days ago I wrote a post on Eclipse and discussed fractional scaling of a selected monitor-screen in a Wayland-session. A reader has written to me and asked whether Wayland works on my system (Opensuse Leap 15.5) reasonably well otherwise.

Frankly, it is a bit like in the early days of KDE4. Wayland works, basically – and compared to Leap 15.4 the situation has improved significantly. But I wouldn’t use Wayland on Leap 15.5, yet, for any professional work under time pressure. During periods of hard work you need to trust your work environment to do what it is supposed to do. You should be able focus a 100% on your tasks – and not loose time with some unexpected glitches in your desktop environment.

However, I use Wayland these days when the risks are low. E.g. when writing blog posts or doing some information gathering on the Internet. Just to become prepared for the day when KDE Plasma switches to Wayland as the standard server for graphical applications. With this post I want to share some experiences with Wayland on a Leap 15.5 system – and give some hints regarding potential problems and workarounds.

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