[03:47] Meta+w is not working in kubuntu 22.04 [06:33] Meta+w shortcut is not working in kubuntu 22.04 [06:36] IrcsomeBot: Is it set? === TsynkVoin is now known as Tsynk [08:12] Good morning === robert__ is now known as Duality [12:09] Hi all [13:19] How can i check? (re @IrcsomeBot: IrcsomeBot: Is it set?) [13:21] Oov: check what? [13:21] I remembered [13:22] run `kcmshell5 kcm_kwin_effects` [13:22] Find Overview effect [13:23] Click the settings button [13:23] There are some global shortcuts listed in the dialog [14:04] Wich one is it [14:13] Thank u [14:28] I tried googling but couldn't find anything useful... Is there any way of enabling the good old Desktop Cube effect in KDE? [14:29] Seems like they've removed it officially [14:36] Plasma 5.23 no longer has the cube animation. https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=443410 [14:36] KDE bug 443410 in kwin "Please restore the Desktop Cube switching effect" [Wishlist, Resolved: Duplicate] [14:39] Ok, so presumably nothing I can do at the moment :/ [15:51] The sound is engaged in the video when i puse it then start it again with vlc [16:07] The sound is oscillates in the video when i puse it then start it again with vlc [18:18] Is kubuntu 20.04 faster than 22.04? [18:21] I think the new plasma version is supposed to be more efficient and has some issues/bugs resolved. So no, it shouldn't be. [18:21] Its unlikely you'd notice speed differences between the tho, but perhaps others have opinion.... [18:23] Why 22.04 use more memory? (re @IrcsomeBot: Its unlikely you'd notice speed differences between the tho, but perhaps others have opinion....) [18:23] And what will be new in point releas [18:24] Point release will just fix any minor problems missed before 22.04 was released, not supposed to be anything significant. [18:25] you'll just get those updates in due course anyway, you dont have to reinstall or do anything when point releases come out [18:25] Ok (re @IrcsomeBot: you'll just get those updates in due course anyway, you dont have to reinstall or do anything when point releases come out) [18:26] But as to it using more memory, I wasn't aware of that. Perhaps you can find someone who has done such an anylsis. [18:26] It wouldn't be too hard to compare htop from both of them and see whats up, if really important to you. [18:26] Maybe even write an article about it. [18:27] Ok i'll ask here again later (re @IrcsomeBot: But as to it using more memory, I wasn't aware of that. Perhaps you can find someone who has done such an anylsis.) [18:28] Well I meant find a blog post or article or something. But yeah maybe someone here's looked into it too, ya never know. [18:28] It wouldnt be that hard to spin up VM of both and compare in real time. [18:28] I'm surprised if 22.04 uses significantly more memory tho. [18:28] Not a big differant (re @IrcsomeBot: But as to it using more memory, I wasn't aware of that. Perhaps you can find someone who has done such an anylsis.) [18:29] If so, I wonder if its some new stuff ubuntu introduced in the background, or if its things growing, or what... hmmmm. [18:30] You can still make ubuntu fairly light if you try. I did LXDE in a VM for fun, it uses around 220MB iirc. [18:30] Yup (re @IrcsomeBot: Well I meant find a blog post or article or something. But yeah maybe someone here's looked into it too, ya never know.) [18:31] * enigma9o7[m] uploaded an image: (435KiB) < https://libera.ems.host/_matrix/media/r0/download/matrix.org/IUclDiZAYHKgNNoACngNIveF/Screenshot%20from%202022-06-10%2011-31-09.png > [18:31] That's my minimal LXDE on jammy. [18:35] Haa [18:39] Is there a multimedia player better than vlc? [18:43] Oov, i'm pretty much happy with mpv but if you like something more fncy looking then smplayer with mplayer backend. [18:43] fancy* [22:03] Any network data monitoring tool for Kubuntu? [22:05] More like Windows 10 which shows Wi-Fi data usage? : https://irc-attachments.kde.org/56af1ce0/file_56923.jpg [22:20] i'm not aware of a current GUI tool to do per application traffic accounting on *ubuntu. it should be able with namespaces and ts/tc, i assume, and maybe someone did it, too (you could search github or bitbucket or just the web) [22:20] i mean "it should be possible", not "it should be able" [22:33] https://linux.die.net/man/8/nethogs [22:53] yes, and no. also not a GUI. [23:07] btop can do it... but it's not a traditional gui [23:08] you can show traffic in the bar via the network speed widget [23:11] i guess this is more about traffic accounting - how much total traffic has passed over this interface, for this pid, rather than a bandwidth meter - how much traffic is currently passing through this interface, for this pid. [23:14] i think nethogs gets close to this, but it measures it from raw traffic monitoring, which is... a bit ugly. and i'm not sure it actually retains history (how much was i using that day two weeks ago? and what is my total trhoughput since that day?) [23:16] i'd expect such to be best measured at the router / switch where this computers' network interface connects to. but then you couldn't do it by PID. [23:18] on my servers I use munin [23:18] but it's not really something for desktops [23:18] (and it's fairly low-tech) [23:18] (not really web 2.0 or web 3.0 or what ever version we're on)