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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 1st, 2023

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  • I’ve only ever used one keyboard off Amazon, and it was a Durgod TKL board with cherry mx browns which was very nice. Still use it from time to time. They do have some full boards (with num pad) if that’s your thing.

    But to be honest the keyboard landscape has changed a lot since I bought that durgod board though and I think it’s now overpriced compared to the competition.

    My advice would be if you know what kind of switches you like (linear, tactile clicky etc) find a cheap ish keyboard you like the look of with those switches. As a beginner cherry switches are a good bet, they’re not the best, but they’re far from the worst and a good starting point and a lot of other switches and keycaps are compatible with them. It would be good idea if the keyboard is hot swap enabled so you can swap the switches out to try other types of switches or even convert the whole board in the future if you like without soldering. But most importantly start cheap, don’t buy something expensive when you’ve never tried mechanical keyboards before and don’t know what you do and don’t like.


  • The boring answer is that you should always be cautious about any device that you use with your computer.

    Any device you plug into your computer, if malicious, can cause all manner of issues. From outright bricking your mobo to injecting malware. This is why you should never plug an unknown usb drive you find into your computer. Any keyboard is vulnerable to keyloggers and other snooping techniques.

    With that said, is it likely? No, not really. It’s quite difficult for a keyboard to phone home unless it’s quite sophisticated, also you’re on Linux, most malware is for windows anyway. I’ve not really heard of this type of attack being used against individuals.

    To be honest you’re probably not a target! If you work somewhere that a bad actor may want to target (the government, the power grid, military, a bank etc) and you want to use the keyboard with a work device or on the same network, then yes you should only use devices your IT team have approved to be safe. Otherwise for you at home, who isn’t being targeted by state level adversaries, a keyboard off the internet is probably fine.


  • Short version: no they didn’t.

    Long version: maybe. Fedora is no longer compiling rpm versions of libreoffice. This is a good thing. There is already a flatpack available, and this is the recommended route to getting the latest and greatest version. Additional this saved dev time from pointlessly compiling packages that are already available as flatpacks. However they are also taking people off libreoffice development and onto other things like HDR support and wayland issues. This will in the long term hurt libreoffice. To be honest, on balance this is probably a good thing.

    Libreoffice is a great personal office environment, however it’s sorely lacking for enterprise use, where MS office compatability, multi user simultaneous collaboration and power user features (powerquery etc) are king. Things that libreoffice, with the greatest respect, sucks at.

    Given this and that fedora is an upstream for RHEL, it doesn’t make sense for Redhat to put effort into an office suite its consumers won’t use, in favour of making other desktop features that users will use better instead.