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      Aryan Kaushik: Open Forms is now 0.4.0 - and the GUI Builder is here

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 1 month from now • 3 minutes

    Open Forms is now 0.4.0 - and the GUI Builder is here

    A quick recap for the newcomers

    Ever been to a conference where you set up a booth or tried to collect quick feedback and experienced the joy of:

    • Captive portal logout
    • Timeouts
    • Flaky Wi-Fi drivers on Linux devices
    • Poor bandwidth or dead zones

    Meme showcasing wifi fails when using forms

    This is exactly what happened while setting up a booth at GUADEC. The Wi-Fi on the Linux tablet worked, we logged into the captive portal, the chip failed, Wi-Fi gone. Restart. Repeat.

    Meme showing a person giving their child a book on 'Wifi drivers on linux' as something to cry about

    We eventually worked around it with a phone hotspot, but that locked the phone to the booth. A one-off inconvenience? Maybe. But at any conference, summit, or community event, at least one of these happens reliably.

    So I looked for a native, offline form collection tool. Nothing existed without a web dependency. So I built one.

    Open Forms is a native GNOME app that collects form inputs locally, stores responses in CSV, works completely offline, and never touches an external service. Your data stays on your device. Full stop.

    Open Forms pages

    What's new in 0.4.0 - the GUI Form Builder

    The original version shipped with one acknowledged limitation: you had to write JSON configs by hand to define your forms.

    Now, I know what you're thinking. "Writing JSON to set up a form? That's totally normal and not at all a terrible first impression for non-technical users." And you'd be completely wrong, to me it was normal and then my sis had this to say "who even thought JSON for such a basic thing is a good idea, who'd even write one" which was true. I knew it and hence it was always on the roadmap to fix, which 0.4.0 finally fixes.

    Open Forms now ships a full visual form builder.

    Design a form entirely from the UI - add fields, set labels, reorder things, tweak options, and hit Save. That's it. The builder writes a standard JSON config to disk, same schema as always, so nothing downstream changes.

    It also works as an editor. Open an existing config, click Edit, and the whole form loads up ready to tweak. Save goes back to the original file. No more JSON editing required.

    Open forms builder page

    Libadwaita is genuinely great

    The builder needed to work well on both a regular desktop and a Linux phone without me maintaining two separate layouts or sprinkling breakpoints everywhere. Libadwaita just... handles that.

    The result is that Open Forms feels native on GNOME and equally at home on a Linux phone, and I genuinely didn't have to think hard about either. That's the kind of toolkit win that's hard to overstate when you're building something solo over weekends.


    The JSON schema is unchanged

    If you already have configs, they work exactly as before. The builder is purely additive, it reads and writes the same format. If you like editing JSON directly, nothing stops you. I'm not going to judge, but my sister might.

    Also thanks to Felipe and all others who gave great ideas about increasing maintainability. JSON might become a technical debt in future, and I appreciate the insights about the same. Let's see how it goes.

    Install

    Snap Store

    snap install open-forms
    

    Flatpak / Build from source

    See the GitHub repository for build instructions. There is also a Flatpak release available .

    What's next

    • A11y improvements
    • Maybe and just maybe an optional sync feature
    • Hosting on Flathub - if you've been through that process and have advice, please reach out

    Open Forms is still a small, focused project doing one thing. If you've ever dealt with Wi-Fi pain while collecting data at an event, give it a try. Bug reports, feature requests, and feedback are all very welcome.

    And if you find it useful - a star on GitHub goes a long way for a solo project. 🙂

    Open Forms on GitHub

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      Nick Richards: Sunset Appearance

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 8 hours ago • 3 minutes

    I love adaptive interfaces and technology that blends in more than the average human. I’ve spent literally years tinkering with ‘frecency’ ordered lists, bought a meural screen and have recently been glorying in the fantastic GNOME Adaptive Brightness .

    On that last point, whilst GNOME already has Automatic Screen Brightness, and it is a good feature, dmy3k’s extension goes further on the specific machines with cool hardware: steadier behaviour with changing light, smoother transitions and brightness curves you can tune. One of the things I’ve been exploring with extensions recently is ’this feature, only more so’ and adaptive brightness is a good example.

    Living far from the equator, evenings happen. The room goes grey, the window stops being a useful light source and GNOME is still cheerfully in light mode because I told it to be bright at the time one takes screenshots. Night Light is already doing its bit by then. The display has warmed up, which is nice, but the rest of the interface lacks the level of ‘darque’ required. I wanted the normal GNOME appearance preference to follow the day as well: light while it still feels like day, dark once the evening has properly arrived. Users of other operating systems may be aware of this feature, but for the purposes of this blog post let us pretend that everything below is entirely unique.

    So I hacked up Sunset Appearance , a small GNOME Shell extension for GNOME Shell 45 to 50. At civil dusk it writes the same setting GNOME Settings uses:

    org.gnome.desktop.interface color-scheme = 'prefer-dark'
    

    At civil dawn it sets it back to:

    org.gnome.desktop.interface color-scheme = 'default'
    

    My dad was an aviator, so I got to hear a lot of exciting words growing up, such as ‘civil twilight’, which always makes me think of Romeo and Juliet. Sunset turns out to be a surprisingly slippery concept, and very longitudinally mediated. In London in summer there can be plenty of useful light after the sun has dipped below the horizon, and the desktop does not need to go ‘darque’ the moment the sun touches the skyline. Nautical and astronomical twilight are too late for an interface preference, and in some places at some times of year they can fail to happen in the normal way at all.

    Civil twilight is when the centre of the sun is 6 degrees below the horizon and when it really does feel like the world has changed character.

    Location is awkward too, because civil dawn and dusk need latitude, longitude and date. There’s some interesting fallback logic to infrequently get a coarse location (good enough for a city) and then fall back to cached data if available as Night Light already needs much the same information. Frequent readers will remember my concerns over London, Ontario being above London, England in many search boxes so there is no virtue in making the user type London into another small box. If neither source has usable coordinates, nothing changes.

    Manual override behaviour is another thing that avoids annoyance. If the extension sets dark mode at dusk and I then change GNOME back to light mode, I meant that. After any override, it waits until the next scheduled dawn or dusk transition before touching the setting again.

    Solar time code has an unreasonable number of edges for something everyone thinks they intuitively understand. Keeping with my aggressive policy on internationalisation the tests keep London as the ordinary case, then poke at time zones, date line longitudes, DST changes, Antarctic stations, Arctic towns, awkward offsets such as Lord Howe and Chatham and cases where civil dawn or dusk may not exist at all. My time reading brr and pretending to be in New Zealand to solve work bugs was not poorly spent.

    Right now Sunset Appearance can be built from source . At some point I may choose to distribute it more widely, or even see if someone has already solved my problem better.

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      Jakub Steiner: Backrooms

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 1 day ago

    Backrooms

    Not the best film ever, but in today's Hollywood landscape it's a rare breath of fresh air. Kane Parsons takes the internet meme concept he started on YouTube and actually makes a feature-length film that's doing great at the box office.

    The mood is great. That unsettling stillness of these generic liminal spaces. For something that builds a feeling / mood, the flick would benefit from a butcher in the editing room. I'd probably still not give it the extra star, but this really isn't the kind of movie that needs the extra 20 minutes.

    Biggest entertainment was definitely watching my son freak out in the third act. :)

    ★★★★☆

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      Christian Hergert: Libdex Improvements

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 1 day ago • 2 minutes

    libdex 1.2 is still in pre-alpha phase but it is also far enough along that it is worth talking about the direction: libdex is growing from a library of future and fiber helpers into a more complete concurrency toolkit.

    The most important 1.2 theme is that applications can now describe not just what work should happen concurrently, but how that work should be bounded and owned. DexLimiter lets a workload run with a fixed concurrency budget, with dex_limiter_run() handling the common fiber case by acquiring a permit before work starts and releasing it after the fiber completes. For larger workflows, DexTaskGroup gives related futures a structured scope that can be closed, awaited, or cancelled as one unit.

    That combination makes cleanup much easier to reason about when a workflow has many moving pieces. A loader can start many subtasks, keep only a useful number active at once, and return a single future representing the whole operation. If the window closes, the project changes, or the operation times out, the group gives the application one place to cleanly shut the work down.

    static DexFuture *
    load_many_files (GPtrArray *files)
    {
      g_autoptr(DexTaskGroup) group = dex_task_group_new (0);
      g_autoptr(DexLimiter) limiter = dex_limiter_new (8);
    
      for (guint i = 0; i < files->len; i++)
        {
          GFile *file = g_ptr_array_index (files, i);
    
          dex_task_group_add (group,
                              dex_limiter_run (limiter,
                                               NULL,
                                               0,
                                               load_one_file,
                                               g_object_ref (file),
                                               g_object_unref));
        }
    
      return dex_future_with_timeout_seconds (dex_task_group_close (group), 10);
    }

    There is also a new DexThreadPool for the cases that are not naturally fiber-shaped. Fibers and schedulers are still the right fit for cooperative async work, but many applications need to integrate blocking libraries, database clients, filesystem helpers, or other foreign code. A fixed pool of reusable OS threads, dex_thread_pool_submit() , and asynchronous dex_thread_pool_close() give that integration story a bounded queue and an explicit shutdown path.

    Deadlines are another practical piece of the same story. The new timeout wrappers, including dex_future_with_timeout_seconds() and dex_future_with_deadline() , turn time limits into ordinary future composition. Instead of open-coded timeout state spread across an application, a future can resolve normally, reject normally, or reject with DEX_ERROR_TIMED_OUT when the deadline wins.

    On the I/O side, 1.2 continues filling in the operations that make responsiveness easier to preserve. dex_aio_open() and dex_aio_close() matter because even operations that look small can stall when they touch the kernel, storage, or network-backed filesystems. Keeping those calls in libdex’s file-descriptor AIO model makes it easier to keep them off the UI thread, using io_uring where it is available and the fallback AIO backend elsewhere.

    The broader GIO coverage is intentionally less surprising, but still important. More app launching, GFile , stream, socket, resolver, proxy, TLS, DTLS, permission, subprocess, and Unix-facing APIs now have future-first wrappers. That is the kind of coverage people should expect from libdex over time: not every wrapper needs a release headline, but each one reduces the pressure to leave the future model for common GNOME application work.

    • Pl chevron_right

      GNOME Internationalization & Localization: Some news about the internationalization project

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 1 day ago • 2 minutes

    This first blog post marks the opening of the internationalization blog! The i18n team will use it to share news and projects on the current plans. Don’t forget to subscribe!

    The i18n team has seen some changes recently, at the beginning of 2026 and we thought it was necessary to publicly announce this change and introduce ourselves a bit.

    Before all, we want to greet and deeply thank all internationalization coordinators that participated in the project so far and made GNOME what is is now. We are a global software community of volunteers, leading the free software ecosystem and are accessible in many languages. With this, we cover almost everyone on Earth. Thank you very much Andre, Alexandre, Claude, Daniel, Gábor, Gil, Mario, Piotr, Petr, Kjartan and all the others. Without you this wouldn’t have been possible.

    What is internationalization?

    Internationalization, or i18n for short, is the act of ensuring software or documentation can be used in other languages, countries, and cultures. This means designing and developing applications in a way that removes barriers to localization, making it possible to adapt them without requiring significant engineering changes.

    In practice, this involves separating user-facing text from the source code, so it can be translated easily, and ensuring that the software correctly handles different character sets and writing systems, including right-to-left scripts. It also means being mindful of cultural conventions such as date and time formats, number formatting, currencies, and units of measurement.

    Internationalization goes beyond text. It includes accommodating differences in sorting rules (collation), keyboard input methods, plural forms, and even layout considerations, as translated text can vary significantly in length. Developers must also ensure that their software supports Unicode and uses libraries or frameworks that simplify handling these variations.

    For the GNOME community, internationalization is a collaborative effort between developers, designers, and translators. By preparing software properly, the i18n team enables localization contributors to focus on producing high-quality translations, ensuring that GNOME is accessible and welcoming to users all around the world.

    A new team

    The team has reborn with new faces: Anders Jonsson, Rafael Fontenelle and Guillaume Bernard, respectively coordinators of the Swedish, Brazilian Portuguese and French team. Let’s introduce ourselves a bit…

    Rafael ( @rafaelff ) is coordinator of the GNOME Brazilian Portuguese Team for more than 13 years after a short but intense period of contribution as translator. Besides GNOME, he contributes to the translation of Python Docs, R language, Fedora, TranslationProject (GNU projects, etc.) and others. Also maintains some packages in Arch Linux’s AUR.

    Anders ( @ajonsson ) is coordinator of the GNOME Swedish Team for over 10 years, translator in the Swedish branch of the Translation Project, and a member of the GIMP Team with a focus on internationalization questions and testing.

    Guillaume ( @gbernard ) is coordinator of the GNOME French Team since this year after 14 years of contributions, first as a translator, reviewer and after a few years, he has been involved in submitting team’s translations. He is the maintainer of GNOME Damnes Lies , our translation platform since 2020. He took this responsibility after years of dedication from Claude. Thank you again for this mentorship!

    • Pl chevron_right

      Steven Deobald: Stay and fight.

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 3 days ago • 3 minutes

    Nine months ago, I had to field quite a few angry comments from folks who told me they intended to drop their GNOME Foundation memberships in the wake of confusing and opaque board behaviour. I say to you now what I told each of them back in September:

    Stay and fight.

    The GNOME Foundation saw a much needed — and long overdue — changing of the guard back in August of 2025. In the past 12 months, the Foundation has finally made the improvements it should have been making over the past decade:

    • 2025-05-09 – GNOME’s infra team had its first management review — it was spotless.
    • 2025-05-16 Foundation Reports begin in earnest as a first small step toward a transparent GNOME Foundation. We begin the hunt for a new Treasurer.
    • 2025-05-23 – We started a Foundation Handbook to match handbook.gnome.org . (This has since migrated to a wiki.) We started moving all the Foundation’s documents into a central location. Project management began at the Foundation for the first time ever.
    • 2025-05-28 – The Foundation publicly acknowledged that attacks on our Matrix servers, using illegal images, constitute crimes.
    • 2025-06-06 – Both donate.gnome.org and (later) fellowship.gnome.org are pitched and accepted by the board. We brought on Deepa Venkatraman as Treasurer. Bart Piotrowski set up vault.gnome.org for passwords.
    • 2025-06-14 – Andrea Veri completed the transition to donated AWS resources for GNOME infra.
    • 2025-06-20 donate.gnome.org is released, thanks to the hard work of Bart, Sam Hewitt, and Jakub Steiner.
    • 2025-06-26 – The “Donate Less” campaign begins, in anticipation of the outbound program that would become fellowship.gnome.org.
    • 2025-07-05 – The concept of fellowship.gnome.org goes public. Work on the corresponding donate.gnome.org shell notification starts. We tightened fiscal controls. We added redundancy to all our financial, legal, and operational processes. We interviewed a pipeline of candidates and selected Ignacy Kuchciński to complete the work under the Digital Wellbeing grant.
    • 2025-07-12 – We invited postmarketOS to the Advisory Board.
    • 2025-07-21 – We started stabilizing the GNOME Foundation’s finances for the long term by redefining the Board Reserve and taking a hard look at balancing year-on-year (annual recurring) revenue and expenses. We added the first-ever redundant signatories on bank accounts.
    • 2025-08-08 – We created a shared online space for Advisory Board members to collaborate.
    • 2025-09-05 – First corporate sponsor.
    • 2025-09-12 – Deepa’s budget process is “the best the Foundation has ever had,” according to multiple directors.
    • 2025-10-10 – Digital Wellbeing is delivered. The Foundation gets a much-needed credit card policy.
    • 2025-10-24 – A new Finance Advisor arrives. (An important role at a 501c3.)
    • 2025-11-28 – The budget is balanced. More importantly, the budget report contains the commitment to balancing recurring expenses and recurring revenue, continuously.
    • 2025-12-19 – Deepa joins as a full director and remains Treasurer.
    • 2026-01-09 – A new automated accounts payable and accounts receivable system is installed.
    • 2026-03-20 – Financial reporting moves from quarterly to monthly.
    • 2026-04-17 – The Fellowship Program begins! Users’ donations come full-circle: a percentage of every donation now goes directly to developers.
    • 2026-05-15 – Finances are on-target. The Foundation opens a position for Finance Director.
    • 2026-05-29 – Four old finance platforms are retired as the finances of the Foundation are automated and simplified. The Foundation introduces a Concern Escalation Policy: if members feel that directors or staff are abusing their positions with policy violations, illegal activity, discrimination, or conflicted behaviour, they’re provided the reassurance that they can blow the whistle without risk of retaliation.

    That’s a lot for one little nonprofit. But this is the beginning of GNOME Foundation 2.0, not the end. The work must continue and there is still plenty to be done.

    If you let your membership expire in recent years, get it back. If you are thinking of leaving, don’t. And if you are thinking of running for board elections, run.

    The GNOME Foundation is the healthiest it’s ever been. It’s reducing costs and focusing on its actual mission: GNOME. The excellence demanded of GNOME hackers is now demanded of the Foundation, too. You can be a part of continuing that trajectory.

    There has never been a more meaningful time to join the GNOME Foundation board .

    Donate to GNOME

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      Gedit Technology: B2B Services around gedit and libgedit

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 4 days ago • 3 minutes

    This article is also available in the B2B Services section on the gedit website .

    Several business-to-business services are possible around gedit:

    • Development of a new plugin.
    • Development of a new text editor or Integrated Development Environment (IDE) based on the libgedit.
    • Code maintenance.
    • Training.
    • Support.
    • Creation of Long-Term Support (LTS) versions.
    • Developer Experience (DX) guidance.
    • […] Come with your own ideas to collaborate with the gedit project.

    Target audience

    • Operating System / Linux distributions: for your installed-by-default text editor.
    • GTK-based desktop environments: to maintain a text editor or IDE, and to adhere to your Human Interface Guidelines (HIG).
    • Scientific sector: to build developer tools.
    • Education sector: to build easy-to-learn developer tools.
    • New programming languages / development platforms: you're designing and implementing a new programming language, and you need developer tools for your users.
    • Older programming languages users: you're a big organization and you have a lot of legacy code. You want better developer tools to be more productive.
    • Markup or domain-specific languages: to better promote your language, you would like first-class support for it.

    The libgedit shared libraries

    gedit is not just a general-purpose text editor application, there is a “libgedit” underneath!

    A lot of gedit features are implemented as re-usable code, as a set of shared libraries. So new apps - text editors and IDEs alike - can be built on top. There is an ongoing effort from the gedit project to make more code re-usable.

    An example of an IDE based on the libgedit is Enter TeX .

    The libgedit is in turn based on the very flexible GTK graphical toolkit .

    GTK 3 or GTK 4

    The libgedit currently targets GTK 3. If you want to develop with GTK 4, there is the GtkSourceView library (but it doesn't contain all the libgedit features). Another possibility is to first port the libgedit to GTK 4.

    The plugin system

    gedit has a powerful plugin system mechanism, to extend the application. You can leverage it for prototyping additional features, or as the final solution that requires less efforts than creating a new specialized text editor.

    You can also combine the best of both approaches:

    • First implement a feature that is based on libgedit.
    • Then wrap your feature in a gedit plugin so it can readily be used.
    • Finally, as an option, create a custom text editor app, re-using the same implementation of your feature(s), integrating everything well together.

    Other developer tools

    The text editor part is essential, it is the central feature of an IDE. But other developer tools can be developed as well.

    For instance, Devhelp can be used for browsing and searching API documentation. Almost all its code is re-usable; like for gedit, there is a libdevhelp toolkit under the hood.

    Advice to not start from scratch

    A little advice: please don't create a new text editor or IDE from scratch, base your work on existing, high-level libraries like the libgedit. Even if it looks simple on paper, developing a feature-full text editor is a lot of work.

    Use the libgedit from your preferred programming language

    libgedit and GTK can be used from a wide range of programming languages, and the support for additional languages can be implemented too. This is thanks to GObject Introspection. See the list of language bindings for the GTK project.

    Open-source or proprietary software

    libgedit and GTK are licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL), which allows to develop proprietary software on top.

    gedit plugins need to be distributed as free/ libre software, under the GPL license.

    Who to collaborate with

    • Sébastien Wilmet , the current maintainer and main developer of gedit and libgedit.
    • You? If you're or work for a consultancy company specialized in GNOME, GLib or GTK, and want to be part of this project, don't hesitate to get in touch!
    • Pl chevron_right

      This Week in GNOME: #251 Monitoring Resources

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 5 days ago • 5 minutes

    Update on what happened across the GNOME project in the week from May 22 to May 29.

    GNOME Core Apps and Libraries

    Maps

    Maps gives you quick access to maps all across the world.

    mlundblad announces

    Thanks to hard work by James Westman, Maps now supports dowloading map areas for offline use!

    download-offline-map.BbqNyO_3_Z2ayTii.webp

    offline-map-details.DDYHv-xr_1JCkWa.webp

    offline-maps-list.CX4utkma_ulF3b.webp

    Document Viewer (Papers)

    View, search or annotate documents in many different formats.

    lbaudin announces

    Papers 50.2 and 49.7 were released this week with a (unusually high) number of bug fixes. Notably, several fractional scaling issues should be fixed thanks to the work of balooii, including both performance and display issues.

    Libadwaita

    Building blocks for modern GNOME apps using GTK4.

    Jamie (she/her) reports

    The upcoming version of Libadwaita now supports binding properties to CSS Classes and vice versa, making it easier to dynamically toggle CSS classes on widgets. This will be available in the upcoming GNOME release.

    GNOME Circle Apps and Libraries

    Sophie (she/her) reports

    We published a blog post with update from the Circle Committee . We are addressing our current review backlog, our new AI policy, new handling of submission issues, earlier reminders about outdated runtimes on Flathub, and new benefits for Circle projects.

    Resources

    Keep an eye on system resources

    Sophie (she/her) says

    Resources has been accepted into the GNOME Incubator, with the goal of eventually replacing the current System Monitor in GNOME Core. You can try the current development state via the nightly Flatpak or on GNOME OS .

    If you find any issues or regressions compared to the current System Monitor app, please report them in the Resources issue tracker . The potential inclusion into Core is tracked under App Organization . Distributions are encouraged to package the app and report any issues they foresee with a possible transition to Resources.

    Congrats and big thanks to nokyan for writing and maintaining this app!

    resources.CQ5ffK93_1Fqj74.webp

    Third Party Projects

    Lőrinc Serfőző reports

    A new version of Exercise Timer was released! This is a quality-of-life update for this simple app for high intensity interval training. Most notably, the training page has been updated with a custom progress indicator. Minor updates include an Undo option for deleted trainings and an update to the latest GNOME runtime. Get Exercise Timer from Flathub: https://flathub.org/en/apps/xyz.safeworlds.hiit

    exercise-timer.Ew1FzJST_ZwDrmP.webp

    Jan-Willem reports

    This week I released Java-GI 1.0.0-RC1 . As the version number suggests, this is the first step towards a “stable” release. With multiple cool apps already on Flathub, like Speed of Sound and Subsound , and several more in active development, I figured it’s time for backward compatibility and API stability.

    Notable improvements in this release are:

    • Support for non-UTF8-encoded filenames
    • Specialized exception types (deriving from GErrorException)
    • Improved Windows support
    • Bug fixes around memory management, class instantiation and nullability annotations.

    Always wanted to build a GNOME app, using your Java (or other JVM language) skills? Give Java-GI a try!

    lo reports

    Nucleus version 3 is released! Nucleus is a periodic table app.

    This update brings a theoretical indicator to Ununennium, as well as some updated properties for Ununennium. French and Italian translations were added and the app was updated to the GNOME 50 runtime as well.

    Get it on Flathub: https://flathub.org/apps/page.codeberg.lo_vely.Nucleus

    Nucleus-theoretical-indicator.DVj1FaM0_2oPqc1.webp

    seja-arctic-fox says

    I’m happy to annouce that VidCom 0.82 has just been released!

    VidCom is a simple utility for archiving videos, written in C++, using ffmpeg for video compression. Major changes in this version include:

    • Multiple stream and subtitle support, switching between mp4 and mkv containers as needed • Faster seeking when Cut Feature is enabled • Fix to correctly compute bitrate when Cut Feature is enabled • Audio is now encoded in Archive mode as well. Previously it was just copied • New cut widget and time setters • UI rework to fit more into the GNOME ecosystem • Switch to GNOME 50 Runtime • Status pages for ‘empty queue’ and ‘encoding’ states • Improved page for viewing results, which does not create a popup window anymore • Popup messages changed to toasts • Small UI desing adjustments; rounded thumbnail corners, better info distribution, formatting bugs • UI refactor

    VidCom is avaiable on Flathub and AUR. Source code can be viewed here

    vidcom_window_with_imported_videos_in_the_queue.Bl6A4KQP_ZnoUXA.webp

    vidcom_video_settings_being_changed.CfxYwaeo_10zkYG.webp

    vidcom_results_view_after_archiving_videos.BkVfQXCc_ZJY0o3.webp

    Anton Isaiev announces

    RustConn Versions 0.15 Released

    I want to thank everyone who opened a request or sponsored the project. All this time, the main features I shipped came from user requests. The most important ones: broadcast, a keyboard passthrough mode that disables the app shortcuts so they go straight to the remote desktop, Windows scripts, and a wizard for an easy start with predefined custom commands. I use all of this every day and it genuinely makes life simpler - which was the whole idea behind the project.

    Homepage: https://github.com/totoshko88/RustConn Flathub: https://flathub.org/en/apps/io.github.totoshko88.RustConn

    RustConn_Broadcast.DgYlS9V9_Z24607B.webp

    RustConn_Custom_command.B5EzjxLy_Z2ejkix.webp

    RustConn_MS_Scripts.DX2AC3Q3_ZgMeTJ.webp

    RustConn_Wizard.C29hCrx5_ZsF4Ks.webp

    Solitaire

    Play Patience Games

    Will Warner announces

    Solitaire 50.2 is out!

    Here is what’s new:

    • Added translations: Georgian (Ekaterine Papava), ‘Chinese (China)’ (lumingzh), Ukrainian (Yuri Chornoivan), Serbian (Марко Костић)
    • Updated translations: Cornish (Flynn Peck), Slovenian (Martin S.), Basque (Asier Saratsua Garmendia)
    • Updated the scores dialog
    • Added an option to the preferences to set the seed for dealing
    • Made unfinished games automatically save
    • Fixed a bug where cards could be dragged from the foundations in Spider
    • Made cards not get selected when dealt
    • Increased the height of tableau in Klondike
    • Added a ‘Redeal Game’ option to the new game dialog
    • Made Tri-Peaks allow Ace + King card combinations

    You can get Solitaire on Flathub

    TWIG-251-Solitaire.Dk-WrowR_ZB782l.webp

    Gitte

    A simple Git GUI for GNOME

    Christian reports

    Gitte, a simple Git client for GNOME built with GTK4, libadwaita and Relm4, just got its 0.5.0 release! 🎉

    The headline feature this time is commit and tag signing. Gitte now supports GPG, X.509 and SSH signing, validates signatures right in the commit log, and ships a dedicated “Signing status” window that walks you through setting everything up. Encrypted signing keys are handled via a new gitte-askpass helper, and every relevant dialog (commit, merge, revert, create tag, …) gets a per-action override switch so you can decide whether to sign on a case-by-case basis. The default respects the repository configuration.

    On top of that, the commit message, revert and create tag dialogs were overhauled, dialogs now carry descriptive subtitles for better discoverability, and there’s a new Ctrl+O / Cmd+O shortcut to open a repository. Under the hood Gitte moved to the new git2 API, switched from polling to IO-event-based refreshes, and gained a Cornish translation (thanks to Flynn Peck!).

    Get it on Flathub , for macOS or have a look at the Code .

    gitte_signature-validation.g-YRrPuq_Z1EJypN.webp

    gitte_signing-status.2lbMrusu_Z12A1hq.webp

    That’s all for this week!

    See you next week, and be sure to stop by #thisweek:gnome.org with updates on your own projects!

    • Pl chevron_right

      Allan Day: GNOME Foundation Update, 2026-05-29

      news.movim.eu / PlanetGnome • 5 days ago • 3 minutes

    Welcome to another update about everything that’s been happening at the GNOME Foundation. As has become my custom, this post covers a two week period, this time from 18 May until today, 29 May. As usual the Foundation continues to be busy, with events, infra, governance, and accounting activities all happening simultaneously. Read on for more information!

    Events

    Linux App Summit (LAS) 2026 was held in Berlin over the 16-17 May weekend. I’ve heard quite a few reports now, and everyone seemed extremely positive about the event. Kristi wrote a nice summary if you want more details.

    The GNOME Foundation had two team members on the ground helping with running the event, which we co-organize with KDE. I’d like to take this opportunity to give a big thank you to the event’s sponsors: openSUSE, Tuxedo, Nextcould and Codethink. This event wouldn’t be possible without your support.

    In addition to LAS, work is continuing on arrangements for GUADEC 2026. The deadline for travel sponsorship applications has now passed, and the Travel Committee has met to decide who will be funded. Notifications will be going out soon.

    Board Elections

    The process is officially underway for this year’s Board elections . Terms on our Board of Directors are two years in length, and each year half the board seats are open for election. This year we have five seats being contested.

    The 2026 election has a slightly different schedule to previous years. In the past, there was no gap between the candidacy period, in which people can announce their intention to run, and the voting period. This meant that there was little opportunity for last-minute candidates to participate in discussion prior to voting taking place.

    To address this, we’ve added a one week discussion period to the schedule, which will run between 8 and 15 June, between the candidacy and voting periods. This will hopefully give us opportunity to have more structured and inclusive debate amongst the candidates. We are still figuring out what that might look like, so if people have ideas or want to help, let me know in the comments.

    GNOME Fellowship

    We are currently in the very final stages of confirming and announcing the successful candidates for the inaugural round of the Foundation’s Fellowship program . Expect an announcement very soon.

    Got a Concern?

    Last week we introduced a new policy for handling of concerns about the Foundation, which is now part of the project handbook.

    The new policy covers how to report concerns about people who are working for the Foundation, either in a paid or voluntary capacity. It also covers more general concerns about the Foundation.

    The main goals of the policy are to:

    • have a documented reporting procedure for those who have concerns relating to the Foundation
    • clarify how concerns will be responded to
    • provide reassurance for those reporting concerns, including that concern reports are welcome, are taken seriously, and will never result in retaliation

    We hope that this policy will make it clear how you can inform us of a concern if you have one. We also want to emphasise that we want to hear concerns, so we can address them. Please do use the new reporting procedure.

    Finance/Accounting

    Work has continued on the finance and accounting operation over the past two weeks. Highlights include:

    • Our transition to a monthly rather than quarterly close reached a significant milestone this week, with the completion of our April finance reports within three weeks of the previous month end. This is probably the fastest ever turnaround for our finance operation, and is a huge win for us in being able to effectively manage our finances.
    • Following input from the board, corrections have now been sent to the accountants for our audit and annual tax filing.
    • Applications are still open for our Director of Finance and Operations part-time contract . Candidates have until 4 June to submit.
    • Finally, as I mentioned in my last update, we are in the process of retiring a number of finance platforms as we consolidate and streamline our operation. This week saw another platform retired, which brings the total number of eliminated platforms to four.

    Infrastructure

    Our infrastructure experienced a DDoS attack last weekend , which Bart and Andrea have been dealing with. Thankfully it seems that services weren’t too badly affected, and we’ve already improved our protection against similar attacks in the future.

    Also on the infra side, Bart wasn’t at LAS this year, but he did spend some time writing two great posts about Flathub’s internals: How does Flathub even work? and Why are Flathub downloads so slow sometimes? . They’re a fascinating read if you’re interested in Flathub.

    That’s it from me! As always, thanks for reading, and see you in two weeks.