Originally posted by archola
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KDE Continues Improving Its Scanner Application, Fixing Plasma Wayland Bugs
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Originally posted by aufkrawall View PostIt does work on Wayland since afair 5.22. It's just a bit bugged when it comes to starting colord. It's also compatible with e.g. night light, so they don't override themselves anymore.
Though it's just 1D LUT (GPU gamma ramps), 3D LUT (gamut mapping) protocol for Wayland still isn't finished.
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> They\re used to bugzilla
Unfortunately GitLab issues lacks many important features of Bugzilla, such as multiple resolution statuses, a “number of duplicates” counter, bulk updates, a “version reported against” field, global templates/tags/milestones/priorities (right now they are per-repo), blocking/blocked by markers, allowing reporters to categorize and tag their own bugs, the ability to have bug reports unconnected to a particular repo (where would all the `plasmashell` bugs go?), a powerful advanced search…
I used to be more in favor of moving to GitLab because of its better UI for reporting bugs, but the more I looked into it, the more I realized that it would be a nightmare for bug triagers and developers of anything except apps where there is a 1:1 mapping of repo to bug report.
(As Nate wrote)
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Originally posted by user1 View PostOh, I see. I'm on X and I'm not sure it even works for me on X. I have colord-kde installed with all its dependencies, the color correction system settings module seems to be using the correct icc profile for my Monitor, but it says "you need Gnome Color Management installed in order to calibrate devices".
But yes, it might also not be reliable on Xorg. On Xorg, also programs like nvidia-settings, xscreensaver or regular Wine Might/will reset gamma ramps (or maybe even night light).
The confusing information box about Gnome color software is also there when it works as expected. I think it should just be removed, as colord already is a dependency of colord-kde package that offers the KCM page in systemsettings. No idea if colord-gtk is required, but if it is (it probably isn't) it could also simply be made a hard dependency of colord-kde.
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Originally posted by Nth_man View Post> They\re used to bugzilla
Unfortunately GitLab issues lacks many important features of Bugzilla, such as multiple resolution statuses, a “number of duplicates” counter, bulk updates, a “version reported against” field, global templates/tags/milestones/priorities (right now they are per-repo), blocking/blocked by markers, allowing reporters to categorize and tag their own bugs, the ability to have bug reports unconnected to a particular repo (where would all the `plasmashell` bugs go?), a powerful advanced search…
I used to be more in favor of moving to GitLab because of its better UI for reporting bugs, but the more I looked into it, the more I realized that it would be a nightmare for bug triagers and developers of anything except apps where there is a 1:1 mapping of repo to bug report.
(As Nate wrote)
There's a million solutions out there better than bugzilla, Gitlab isn't the only option. Plus "multiple resolution statuses" or "number of duplicates", really? I've been developing code for almost 20 years without needing either of those, that's how important those features are.
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Originally posted by bug77 View PostNo actual improvements there, you still have to figure out that neverending list of components. Last I tried, I wasn't even able to find my own bugs. It was easier to search for them in the email and use the links in there.
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Originally posted by bug77 View Post
Yeah, developer comfort over community engagement. A page out of Gnome's book
There's a million solutions out there better than bugzilla, Gitlab isn't the only option. Plus "multiple resolution statuses" or "number of duplicates", really? I've been developing code for almost 20 years without needing either of those, that's how important those features are.
What are some of those million non-Bugzilla solutions that are better?
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