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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • I have gone from borgbackup to rdiff-backup to reduce complexity and dependencies. rdiff-backup’s incremental strategy needs more space than deduplication from borgbackup, but you don’t need fuse and borg itself to restore your latest backup.

    With rdiff-backup you can just use cp -a to restore all your files. Only if you need a file you deleted ages ago, you need it.

    I relied on borgbackup for a long time, never had an incident. But then I wanted to try the new replication borg2 feature and almost lost my original borg1 repo. With rdiff-backup you can just rsync the repo to another drive and have two copies of your offline offsite redundant backup. Encryption is a non-issue, you can run it on top of every other filesystem and LUKS or over SSH.

    Granted, I just switched to rdiff-backup, but I am loving the simplicity of it already.


  • Finally I found the time to write down, how I use Ghostscript:

    gs \
        -sDEVICE=pdfwrite \
        -o /output/gs_file.pdf \
        -dPDFSETTINGS=/prepress \
        -sProcessColorModel=DeviceCMYK \
        -sDefaultCMYKProfile=/path/to/ISOcoated_v2_eci.icc \
        -sColorConversionStrategy=CMYK \
        source/file.pdf \
        -f
    

    I don’t now which of ProcessColorModel or ColorConversionStrategy is the important one. I kept both and did not bother to try to omit one of them. -dPDFSETTINGS=/prepress makes sure that embedded bitmaps are in 300dpi and I think -f prevents Ghostscript staying in interactive mode after all pages have been finished.






  • ghostcript can add a color profile, too. I use the regular ISO coated v2 (without the 300%). This is just a step to not do all things in Scribus by hand and make sure colors are not out of gamut.

    I don’t now the command line from the top of my head. Just ping me again, so when I am on my computer I can send the complete ghostscript cli line that currently works for me.

    The final profile is set up by Scribus, where I have set it to the ISO coated with 300%. Ideally I would like to have less steps in the chain, so that a change in the Inkscape-source involves less manually steps. One can dream of it. (:


  • I basically use it only for mail, although I have set up my calender there, too. The evolution-data-server makes it possible to access the calender entries using gnome-calender which has a modern gui.

    You can still accept email invites in evolution and see them in gnome-calendar. It works very well with my radical server.

    And second bonus, it integrates your dates with gnome-shell. Just disable notifications in evolution to don’t get them twice. (:



  • I am actually producing PDF/X-4 print-ready stuff with Inkscape, ghostscript and Scribus. I even have TrimBoxes and proper CMYK.

    But it involves many manual steps, especially overprinting for the K color channel does not work and I need to adjust every polygon and vectorized text manually.

    I whish it would be possible all in one tool. I can afford the time, because it is only a hobby. If it would be professional the extra steps involved make it not good enough.



  • Gentoo for my workstation because I need flexibility, security and stability there and Debian stable for my Raspberries running all the services I need 24/7 access to.

    I don’t like all the spin-offs of the major distros. And no, Ubuntu is not a major distro it is based on Debian and they are known for some really bad decisions in past and present, eg: snap instead of flatpak.