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Flatpak Doesn't Work in Ubuntu 25.10, But a Fix is Coming

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"It's not just you: Flatpak flat-out doesn't work in the new Ubuntu 25.10 release," writes the blog OMG Ubuntu: While Flatpak itself can be installed using apt, trying to install Flatpaks with Flatpak from the command-line throws a "could not unmount revokefs-fuse filesystem" error, followed by "Child process exited with code 1". For those who've installed the Ubuntu 'Questing Quokka' and wanted to kit it out with their favourite software from Flathub, it's a frustrating road bump.

AppArmor, the tool that enforces Ubuntu's security policies for apps, is causing the issue. According to the bug report on Launchpad, the AppArmor profile for fusermount3 lacks the privileges it needs to work properly in Ubuntu 25.10. Fusermount3 is a tool Flatpak relies on to mount and unmount filesystems... This is a bug and it is being worked on. Although there's no timeframe for a fix, it is marked as critical, so will be prioritised.

The bug was reported in early September, but not fixed in time for this week's Ubuntu 25.10 release, reports Phoronix: Only [Friday] an updated AppArmor was pushed to the "questing-proposed" archive for testing. Since then... a number of users have reported that the updated AppArmor from the proposed archive will fix the Flatpak issues being observed. From all the reports so far it looks like that proposed update is in good shape for restoring Flatpak support on Ubuntu 25.10. The Ubuntu team is considering pushing out this update sooner than the typical seven day testing period given the severity of the issue.
More details from WebProNews: Industry insiders point out that AppArmor, Ubuntu's mandatory access control system, was tightened in this release to enhance security... This isn't the first time AppArmor has caused friction; similar issues plagued Telegram Flatpak apps in Ubuntu 24.04 LTS earlier this year, as noted in coverage from OMG Ubuntu.
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jepler
6 hours ago
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oops, not a good bug to have shipped with.
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Intel's Open Source Future in Question as Exec Says He's Done Carrying the Competition

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An anonymous reader shares a report: Over the years, Intel has established itself as a paragon of the open source community, but that could soon change under the x86 giant's new leadership. Speaking to press and analysts at Intel's Tech Tour in Arizona last week, Kevork Kechichian, who now leads Intel's datacenter biz, believes it's time to rethink what Chipzilla contributes to the open source community. "We have probably the largest footprint on open source out there from an infrastructure standpoint," he said during his opening keynote. "We need to find a balance where we use that as an advantage to Intel and not let everyone else take it and run with it."

In other words, the company needs to ensure that its competitors don't benefit more from Intel's open source contributions than it does. Speaking with El Reg during a press event in Arizona last week, Kechichian emphasized that the company has no intention of abandoning the open source community. "Our intention is never to leave open source," he said. "There are lots of people benefiting from the huge investment that Intel put in there." "We're just going to figure out how we can get more out of that [Intel's open source contributions] versus everyone else using our investments," he added.

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jepler
3 days ago
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> the company needs to ensure that its competitors don't benefit more from Intel's open source contributions than it does

the dalliance of corps with open source software is born from convenience, not altruism. Like many, I've been tempted to forget that.
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Arduino: From Blink to Think …or blink once for open source, twice for AI

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screenshot of an arduino promotional email. subject line says: “big announcement ahead: watch live october 7th!” the body shows the arduino logo and navigation links (home, documentation, blog, store). below, bold text reads “arduino from blink to think global event” over a dark purple background. an angled close-up of an arduino board is visible, with connectors, pins, and circuitry highlighted under dramatic lighting. a tagline underneath reads: “get your front-row seat to the future.”
tldr; arduino teases its “from blink to think” ai launch amid $54m funding, raising questions about open-source certification, attribution, and the future of maker hardware.

In today’s mail, Arduino is teasing its “From Blink to Think” global event, branding it as the biggest reveal yet. A new product is set to launch that promises to “redefine tech” and empower builders everywhere, and it’s what will make the $54 million invested in Arduino all come together. So, yeah, it will be some AI thing.

Blink (the classic “hello world” LED tutorial) –> Think (AI).

Arduino has $54 million in funding, which is. Do investors care about breadboards and blinky LEDs? Or do they care more about recurring subscription revenue and having what is being called “AI” all over the place, from IDEs to the hardware.

Arduino will be acquired, or that’s a likely fate with funding, the investor need a return, this is a good time for vc-funded-Arduino to collaborate with open-source Arduino contributors. Some issues have shown no movement or progress on the IP/code/attribution front, and much of open source is about demonstrating intent. There are zero Open Source Hardware certifications from Arduino (there is from SparkFun, which licensed Arduino). It worth noting that it looks like the open-source SparkFun Arduino pro mini has had more sales than the Arduino version which is not open-source certified. I know some people do not think it matters if it’s open-source, but game is game ya’ll – it’s pretty cool to see the for-sure open-source doing well.

Arduino could also announce at this event that they are open-sourcing the Uno with an Open Source Hardware certification. Does it matter? No. It’s only if Arduino wants to send the signal. I asked 2 years ago, message received.

“We considered your suggestion of submitting our products for OSHWA certification, but we believe this would not provide any benefit to us or to end users as our strong commitment in open source hardware and software is already well known.”

And before Arduino goes full on AI… It would be great for Arduino to look at another A I first, Adafruit Industries! Please look at the library manager closely, we’ve had a long history with Arduino, including making Arduino’s in the USA (back when their company was taken over and there were two Arduinos)… and Limor has been a top contributor from the start, she is also about to have kid #2, so we’ll be busy with that soon and I want to be able to show our kids it’s always possible to try to fix things, and if not – document what happened, publish, and keep moving. Look like we’re gonna keep movin’

The “iArduino” contributions that appeared in the Arduino open-source report, from Arduino, indicate that something called iArduino, which isn’t Arduino itself, has made its code part of the ecosystem. We reported this, along with examples from Limor’s code where it appears the attribution was removed and the code was translated into Russian, among other instances. Arduino agreed something was “weird” and changed the name on the presentation and then instructed us to issue DMCA (take-down) requests, no thank you. That raises questions about ownership, attribution, and compliance. Arduino stated that they could not prevent the iArduino from using their trademark, but perhaps there is some information I am not aware of.

Since this might be an issue going forward, we used an edited Edge Impulse PR (acquired by Qualcomm). The PR does the same thing; it adds trademark rules in rules-trademarks.yml. Arduino’s complex history with trademarks and intellectual property is a thing. “AI” is its current state is still in court, a bunch of other people’s copyrighted stuff, this could add additional complexity depending on where Arduino goes.

Arduino surely has an open-source person in charge of open-source, no. The role of “Head of Maker Business, Open Source & Community” appears to be no longer in existence at Arduino. The Arduino CEO informed us and referred us to the “Chief Product Officer.”

That’s a bummer; it appears the more funding, the less open-source, and the less open-source-focused staff. The move to Arduino Pro, removal of the open-source commitments on the about pages, to “From Blink to Think” – likely a new AI board, all this costs tons of money too. See – “What will we do with an additional $22M?” – Arduino blog.

Arduino will likely pitch their new thing as the future. But the future isn’t what anyone expects, or can predict (maybe, sometimes you get to make it).

One thing is for sure, Arduino is a community, and Arduino like it or not is stuck with us, so please Arduino – you can pivot or whatever to AI and cloud IDEs with AI and hardware with AI, just spend the time to make it clear what’s open, what’s not, the $54m in funding happened _because_ of open source, not because of some future AI offering or “Industrial IoT” of whatever flavor of the day was.

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jepler
14 days ago
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> The “iArduino” contributions that appeared in the Arduino open-source report, from Arduino, indicate that something called iArduino, which isn’t Arduino itself, has made its code part of the ecosystem. We reported this, along with examples from Limor’s code where it appears the attribution was removed and the code was translated into Russian, among other instances. Arduino agreed something was “weird” and changed the name on the presentation and then instructed us to issue DMCA (take-down) requests, no thank you. That raises questions about ownership, attribution, and compliance. Arduino stated that they could not prevent the iArduino from using their trademark, but perhaps there is some information I am not aware of.


whaaaat
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Vimeo Acquired

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Jamie Lang (Hacker News):

Vimeo, once the internet’s most prestigious stage for independent filmmakers and animators, is being acquired by Milan-based app developer Bending Spoons in a $1.38 billion all-cash deal. The sale, expected to close later this year, will end Vimeo’s turbulent run as a public company.

[…]

Bending Spoons CEO Luca Ferrari promised “ambitious investments” in Vimeo’s future, citing enterprise video services and AI-enabled features. But given the company’s track record — including significant staff cuts and restrictions at Evernote and WeTransfer — many in the creative community are skeptical.

Via Manton Reece:

Says something about Vimeo’s decline that I heard about them being acquired not from the tech news websites that I read all the time, but from Cartoon Brew in my RSS reader[…]

Previously:

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jepler
15 days ago
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pouring one out for a person I know who moved their catalogue from YT to Vimeo to escape awfulness
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jhamill
15 days ago
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Bending Spoons is acquiring all the early web 2.0 companies that are left. They took ownership of Evernote a year ago. Interesting.
California
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tpbrisco
14 days ago
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Think it was hard to NOT include AI?

t-rex in: The New Invention He Thought Of In The Shower

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September 26th, 2025next

September 26th, 2025: This comic was inspired by the robots in my life!! There are many, especially if you are generous with your definition of "robot"! For example, my toasting robot is sadly inconsistent on one side of the bread.

– Ryan

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jepler
17 days ago
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Nimble, gentle and generous robot arms. So say we all.
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rocketo
17 days ago
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seattle, wa
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fancycwabs
17 days ago
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The robots that flush our toilets in public restrooms are going to file a grievance.
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NEW PRODUCT: Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2 – 5″ 720×1280 with Capacitive Touch – SC1975

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NEW PRODUCT: Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2 – 5″ 720×1280 with Capacitive Touch – SC1975

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Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2 is the sequel to the popular Raspberry Pi Official Display. It’s smaller than the original: a mere 5′′, but has better resolution for a compact touchscreen display for Raspberry Pi. Unlike the original, it has a much higher quality IPS TFT screen, the same kind used on tablets. That means it looks great at any angle, and it has much higher resolution too, 1280×720 rather than 800×480! It is ideal for interactive projects such as tablets, entertainment systems, and information dashboards.

Raspberry Pi OS provides touchscreen drivers with support for five-finger touch and an on-screen keyboard, giving you full functionality without the need to connect a keyboard or mouse. No coding or special drivers required, everything works out of the box if you’re running the latest Pi OS.

Only two connections are required to connect the 720×1280 display to your Raspberry Pi: power from the GPIO port, and a ribbon cable that connects to the DSI port on all Raspberry Pi computers except for the Raspberry Pi Zero line. The Pi can be mounted on the back for a cute all-in-one setup.

The display can be configured for portrait or landscape mode. Check out the installation guide for how to get started fast. No tools are required, it’s plug-and-play easy!

In stock and shipping now!

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jepler
18 days ago
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don't tempt me :rofl:
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