Android Leftovers

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Every Android 11 R Feature We Know So Far In 2019
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US unlocked LG G8 Android 10 update leaked, Korean variant receives December patch
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Nokia-branded Android TV arrives in India this week w/ 4K, Pie, JBL audio, more
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Rapid TV News - 3SS, Media Distillery, XroadMedia team to enable Android ‘linear-on-demand’
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[Update: New Netflix remote] OnePlus TV update brings Netflix support to the Android TV
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Google Reaffirms Commitment To Kotlin Programming Language For Android
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Android Developer - Kranze Technology Solutions
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6 Reasons Why You Should Always Update your Android Smartphones
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34 new Android games from the week of December 2, 2019: EVE Echoes, SaGa Scarlet Grace: Ambitions, and Terraforming Mars
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This week in Android: new Snapdragon processors, ugly camera bumps, and more
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Top trending games of the week on Android smartphones
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Digit Zero 1 Awards 2019: Best Premium Android Smartphone
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Android Central Podcast #452: A Conversation with Qualcomm
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Nokia 2.3 launched: Android One into 2021 for US$121
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today's howtos
| Wine Developers Are Working On A New Linux Kernel Sync API To Succeed ESYNC/FSYNC
While there is the prior "ESYNC" and "FSYNC" work pursued by Wine for the Linux kernel, it appears Wine developers are back to the drawing board in coming up with a Linux kernel implementation for Wine synchronization primitives that will address all their needs and match the Windows behavior well.
CodeWeavers developer Zebediah Figura sent out a lengthy mailing list post on Sunday night outlining the current state and objectives of coming up with kernel-based Wine synchronization primitives. While the ESYNC/FSYNC patches were successful in improving the performance of many Windows games running on Linux, they are still working towards a more all encompassing solution and to match the behavior well for Windows and with optimal speed.
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Linux Weekly Roundup: Wine 6.0, Fedora i3 Spin, and More
Here’s this week’s (ending Jan 17, 2021) roundup series, curated for you from the Linux and the open-source world on application updates, new releases, distribution updates, major news, and upcoming highlights. Have a look.
| Linux 5.11-rc4
Things continue to look fairly normal for this release: 5.11-rc4 is solidly average in size, and nothing particularly scary stands out. In the diff itself, the new ampere modesetting support shows up fairly clearly - it's one of those hardware enablement things that should be entirely invisible to people who don't have that hardware, but it does end up being about a fifth of the whole rc4 patch. If you ignore that oddity, the rest looks pretty normal, with random patches all over, and a lot of it being quite small. All the usual suspects: drivers (gpu, sound, rdma, md, networking..) arch updates (arm64, risc-v, x86), fiesystems (ext4, nfs, btrfs), core networking, documentation and tooling. And just random fixes. The appended shortlog gives the details as usual.. Linus ![]() |
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