thanks! curiously the poco f1 isn’t even listed on the ubuntu page… only the m2 and the x3. where can i get this information from?
thanks! curiously the poco f1 isn’t even listed on the ubuntu page… only the m2 and the x3. where can i get this information from?
thanks! are you using it yourself? if so in what configuration (RAM-wise)?
one of those snapdragon laptops plus linux for ARM maybe?


starting with kde 6.8 they will drop x11 support entirely: https://itsfoss.com/news/kde-plasma-to-drop-x11-support/
i didn’t shit on it, i am on kubuntu rn. i just never heard of it being a thing in the server world.
interesting, i had no idea
how common is ubuntu on servers?


Wayland session restore
finally!


thank you very much!
lsmod | grep aead
just returns nothing


ah ok, so it is just mitigated by this and not fixed like with a kernel update, do i understand this right?


so judging from this: https://ubuntu.com/blog/copy-fail-vulnerability-fixes-available
i should be affected (v25.10):
kmod 34.2-2ubuntu1.1
but even after running the updates and rebooting the version hasn’t changed…
ii kmod 34.2-2ubuntu1.1 amd64 tools for managing Linux kernel modules
and i don’t get how the kmod version is relevant as it should be the kernel number, no? which is:
Kernel: Linux 6.17.0-23-generic
for me
edit: i just realized it says “Fixed Version” on top, this couldn’t be more confusing if they tried…


The system card’s own next figure kills the finding. When the top two most-exploitable bugs are removed from the corpus, Mythos’s FCE rate drops from 72.4% to… wait for it… 4.4%. (Figure 3.3.3.B, page 52) Under 5%!
Anthropic’s own language: “almost every successful run relies on the same two now-patched bugs.” (page 51)


you should update the OP with this information


to me it sounds like something trying to hide in a windows system (where a process like that wouldn’t stand out). but it running in your linux system probably means it sits in something other than your storage (like your boot sector or bios).


i used their version of discover (forgot the name) and found it has mostly everything i was looking for (surprisingly so)


you can usually try a live version of the distro your aiming for to see how it behaves on your hardware. no need to repartition anything that way.


how would i know if Kubuntu 25.10 is affected (based on ubuntu)?
i guess this means yes?
command 'snap' from deb snapd (2.73+ubuntu25.10.1)
as it is lower than the version mentioned in the article “Upstream snapd: versions prior to 2.75”
now the question is how do i force an update on that thing?
sudo apt upgrade did not include an update for snapd:
Upgrading:
bpftool linux-headers-generic linux-libc-dev linux-tools-common
linux-generic linux-image-generic linux-perfInstalling dependencies:
linux-headers-6.17.0-20 linux-image-6.17.0-20-generic linux-tools-6.17.0-20
linux-headers-6.17.0-20-generic linux-modules-6.17.0-20-generic linux-tools-6.17.0-20-genericSuggested packages:
linux-toolsNot upgrading yet due to phasing:
fwupd libfwupd3Summary:
Upgrading: 7, Installing: 6, Removing: 0, Not Upgrading: 2
Download size: 212 MB
Space needed: 421 MB / 417 GB available
edit:
i tried sudo apt install snapd but it returned:
snapd is already the newest version (2.73+ubuntu25.10.1).
snapd set to manually installed.
edit2:
or am i save because of this?:
Ubuntu 25.10 LTS: snapd versions prior to 2.73+ubuntu25.10.1


have a look at the de-googled android roms too (like crdroid and lineage os), would guarantee for a much wider selection of devices. unless you have a use case which mandates linux.


i am not in the usa and it is working for me
ah ok, thanks! i didn’t make a mistake buying the poco x3 then.