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Show HN: WeaveMind – AI Workflows with human-in-the-loop

https://weavemind.ai
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Quartz Crystals

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The British Empire's Brothels

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2•jaskaransainiz•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Plasma Bigscreen rises from the dead with a better UI

https://www.neowin.net/news/kdes-android-tv-alternative-plasma-bigscreen-rises-from-the-dead-with-a-better-ui/
202•bundie•6mo ago

Comments

giancarlostoro•6mo ago
The biggest thing they need to do is find a vendor that will sell devices with this on it, then figure out which Distro to set it up with.

I would love an Arch or Debian based distro powering my TV streaming apparatus. In the meantime, I'll continue to use Apple TV since I'm in that ecosystem already, bit I'm always open for a true Linux TV experience if someone makes a small form factor Linux for TV device that lets me SSH into it if I really want to, but contains all the eye candy of a TV OS.

MisterTea•6mo ago
I have an AMD APU Linux PC hooked to my TV with a Logitech K400. Its a bit more fiddly than a throw away android based TV stick thing but you have complete freedom and control.
m_t•6mo ago
Would you care to share the specs?

Any issue for streaming DRM content like netflix, or decoding high nitrate h265?

Thank you !

NewJazz•6mo ago
An asrock deskmini would probably do. Anything zen2 or newer I'd be fine with personally.
MisterTea•6mo ago
Ryzen 5 4600G on an ITX board with 16GB RAM, 512GB NVMe and hard-wired gigabit. It's hooked to a ~40 inch Sony 1080p dumb TV via HDMI.

I don't use fancy GUI media centers or anything, just a standard Debian XFCE desktop scaled up. Netflix and Hulu work just fine in Chrome and Firefox. No idea about 2k+ performance due to 1080p limit. TV for me is mostly background noise so media quality is of no concern to me.

My only gripe is once in a rare while the audio goes to shit and continually crackles but reboot and its fixed.

bobson381•6mo ago
yep, k400 and a dell optiplex mini running debian with plasma. can stream, pull up youtube, cast to spotify, whatever. it rocks.
const_cast•6mo ago
I watch everything on my web browser with a fancy OLED monitor. The problem is that many services won't give you even HD, let alone UHD. I'm stuck at 480p for renting movies on YouTube.

Android TV sticks scare me, but the Apple TV seems... okay.

girvo•6mo ago
DRM becoming so entrenched in the web still makes me sad beyond measure
hhh•6mo ago
I use an Apple TV w/ the Infuse app for Jellyfin. I pay for premium for it, and can watch media from my pi5 running Jellyfin/Sonarr etc.
jnaina•6mo ago
Infuse is awesome. I use it with Plex/Sonarr, both on the Apple TV and the AVP.
KetoManx64•6mo ago
Try KDE-Connect, you can send mouse in-out, change volume, open links, etc.
heavyset_go•6mo ago
Streaming platforms won't serve Linux desktops high resolution content, unfortunately. Been the case for like a decade
olyjohn•6mo ago
Thats what The Pirate Bay is for.
paradox460•6mo ago
Linux still doesn't have much of an answer for Dolby Vision, regardless of how you acquire content.
nfriedly•6mo ago
Yeah, I have a similar setup. I recently tried out an Apple TV - I went back to the PC the same day.
mschuster91•6mo ago
The problem is, any streaming device that's not fully locked down and blessed by the holy gods themselves (i.e. iPhone, un-rooted Android, Fire TV, Chromecast 4K, Apple TV) will not be able to get more than 720p/1080p quality. The streaming providers are really really nasty about that, no matter that enough ways exist to dump any and all shows in full quality anyway.
newsclues•6mo ago
Just need to support media servers like Plex and Jellyfin at 4K.

In fact needing to access a streaming service, instead of a local server, sounds like a feature people don't need, even if it would be nice.

rasmus-kirk•6mo ago
At this point, I think pirating is more moral than actually paying for your digital media. The digital media scene for shows/movies is so incredibly hostile to consumers that not giving them money feels like the moral position. I don't feel it's necessarily the case for music (Qobuz) and especially games (GOG, hell even Steam). Not sure on books since I mostly read blogs, scientific articles (that definitely _should_ be pirated) and freely available math/crypto texts.
newsclues•6mo ago
Owning and running a local media server at home doesn’t automatically make one a pirate, there is free content and some laws allow for ripping and streaming your copy to your tv or other device.
rasmus-kirk•6mo ago
There is not a lot of free content out there comparatively. As for ripping yourself, that's fine, but usually it's:

1. Takes a lot more time. 2. Costs _a lot_ more money than streaming services. 3. Is _often_ illegal.

You could say price shouldn't be an issue here, if we're talking about morals, but a single season on BLU-RAY of shows can easily cost ~70 USD (at least here in Denmark), compared to a ~10 USD streaming service. The idea is, of course that the largest fans and collectors are willing to purchase these, but it's not doable for replacing a streaming flow. So practically, it's a large consideration.

And principally I really can't blame pirates when they get their stuff, cheaper, better, faster and more easily. Again, Steam represents a nice counter-balance, Steam is much easier, while still being very affordable, than pirating. I haven't pirated a game in 10 years, even for studios who I would rather not have my money (Disco Elysium), I still purchased the game on sale, just for the convenience.

qmr•6mo ago
So don't pay the streaming providers if you want 4K.

Vote with your wallet and dollars.

Sail the high seas.

yjftsjthsd-h•6mo ago
> I would love an Arch or Debian based distro powering my TV streaming apparatus.

I'd prefer one of the immutable variants for that kind of appliance device. My personal bias is toward OpenSUSE MicroOS, but Debian or Arch based would also be good. (That doesn't mean you can't ssh in, just that there are more guardrails and the system can better self-maintain by default.)

giancarlostoro•6mo ago
Immutable is a new part of the distro world for me I kind of want to like it but last time I tried to setup one of those Atomic distros it didnt really work for me, I appreciate them for what they are but it made me realize what I personally wanted was Arch, bleeding edge so I always have up to date software.

Atomic distros would do it for me I think. Something very stable.

Course atomic distros make me think of Debian more than anything ;)

yjftsjthsd-h•6mo ago
Atomic and update speed are orthogonal. And ex. https://blendos.co/ and https://arkanelinux.org/ are atomic Arch derivatives if that's your speed. (Not explicitly endorsing either, but they're there.)
mikae1•6mo ago
Being an https://getaurora.dev (Universal Blue based) user I don't notice updates at all. I don't update, updates happen in the background. What difference does "speed" make then?
yjftsjthsd-h•6mo ago
If someone finds a security vulnerability in software you're using, it would be really nice if you could get the update in the very next reboot instead of needing to wait a few weeks for it to come through
ThatMedicIsASpy•6mo ago
I would not want to deal with anything and have a stable system so Fedora Atomics or a custom ublue image.

https://github.com/ublue-os/image-template.

grebnek•6mo ago
Would be nice if valve released a steamOS box, steam big picture for gaming/game-streaming and Plasma big screen for other media. Like you know can use the plasma desktop on steam deck.
saghm•6mo ago
They did something kind of close to this in the past, but as a streaming device that connected to a desktop [1]. A roommate of mine had one hooked up to his projector we used as a TV in the living room. If I'm remembering correctly, there was both a dedicated first-party controller and the ability to use console controllers (Xbox, PS4, etc.).

What's interesting to me in retrospect is how this might have been an intentional stepping stone on the way to the Steam Deck; they got to dip their toes in hardware at a time when the company didn't have much experience in it, as well as a lot more testing data for their controller support that would become an important part of how users interact with the Steam Deck. When I first got a Steam Deck, I realized how many years they probably had been planning something like this given all of the long-term bets like this that it capitalized on (heavy investment into Linux gaming being another big one). It took me until their more recent official support for other handheld gaming devices on SteamOS to consider that if they planned that far ahead for the Steam Deck, there's no reason that wouldn't have to be their ultimate end-goal, and they could have similarly long-term plans still in motion that the Steam Deck itself could just be a stepping stone to. My current theory is that they might not even care about being in hardware in the long run as much as making SteamOS the de facto default for the emerging market of "handheld desktop" gaming consoles (or whatever the term is for devices like the Steam Deck). I could easily imagine that getting the Steam Deck out first as an established player being a strategy to try to prevent what presumably would otherwise be a Microsoft-dominated future for the market in the same way that they've been basically the only player in traditional desktop gaming systems for so long, and using Microsoft's own playbook to do it by just providing the OS and not the hardware. Interestingly, the Steam Deck is remarkably open to being used pretty much however I want (i.e. giving me a full-fledged desktop mode where I can install whatever I want and letting me set up games I didn't get from Steam to run in the more streamlined gaming mode in the exact same way I already do it on my Linux desktops), so my perception is that in the long run they're expecting for the investments to pay off in terms of the revenue from game purchases made by users of these devices, since buying from Steam is still the most streamlined option even though playing games from anywhere else is still supported. Considering the fringe benefits all this has had in terms of making Linux desktop gaming a pretty viable alternative nowadays and that their support for using the hardware however I want is better than what the vendors of the existing major players in mobile devices offer today, it's hard for me to be unhappy with the idea of a future where this plan succeeds.

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_Link

somat•6mo ago
I am halfway convinced the idea of a "10 foot ui" driven by a remote is... well not wrong, but perhaps we could do better. Have the big screen be for just that, a spot to display video. Have the remote control, with the entire UI, be on a phone. I would keep the interface as a web interface so you don't have to screw around with an app to make it work, and include collaborative features so everyone gets to fight^wshare over what is shown.
KetoManx64•6mo ago
You can already do this with KDE-Connect. Touchpad input, send text, change volume, open URLs. Works great on my Media PC in the living room.
ghc•6mo ago
I bet apple would actually be a great case study here. They have a great 10 foot UI, the world's shittiest TV remote, and a very easy to use system where your phone can be the entire UI and the TV can just play video (AirPlay).

If people still use the 10 foot UI despite the bad remote, I think the 10 foot UI must be the right idea. Unfortunately I'm pretty sure apple will never share those usage stats with us.

wolrah•6mo ago
This is basically what a Chromecast was. Internally they were basically just an appliance that booted to a very minimal version of Chrome which could be remote controlled by a compatible application, web site, or device.

It was a neat concept but I always found it annoying to have to keep going back to the app to control it when I was doing something else, or keep a tab open in my web browser, and it would often disconnect the session so no one could control it without just stopping and restarting entirely.

You can still use that interaction model on the newer Chromecast-branded devices but they're also full-fat Android TV devices that can be used standalone with a dedicated remote control and run actual apps, which I think is a nice balance.

constantcrying•6mo ago
>The biggest thing they need to do is find a vendor that will sell devices with this on it, then figure out which Distro to set it up with.

If you can not figure out how to boot a raspberry pi or another micro computer with this, you should not be using it. There is a base technical competency required to run any Linux distro and being able to flash an image to an SD card and boot from it is part of that basic tech literacy.

MattTheRealOne•6mo ago
This is great news. I am currently using regular Plasma on a mini pc with my TV, but it would be great having an optimized interface. That being said, without apps also being optimized, it would not be that significant of an improvement.
giancarlostoro•6mo ago
Which distro do you use? :)
MattTheRealOne•6mo ago
I am using Fedora Kinoite since I mostly just use Firefox on my TV, so the limitations of an atomic distribution are not relevant for my use case.
ThatMedicIsASpy•6mo ago
To me it would be relevant to my use case since a TV box is not something I tinker with or want to have to worry about updates.
WorldPeas•6mo ago
currently using a NEC billboard with an OPS module and linux mint (not ideal, when the monitor connection sleeps, the audio turns off). This could be good, especially now that there are a dearth of 1.6b small models that could probably run on the SFP's APU (though I could be wrong)
aquova•6mo ago
Oh this is wonderful news. I had stumbled upon Plasma Bigscreen a few years ago, and while it looked like exactly what I wanted, development was pretty dead. I shall have to take a look at running it again, it would be great as a Roku alternative
raffael_de•6mo ago
How does this work? You write an ISO file on a USB stick and plug it into a TV? Or do you need something like an Amazon Fire TV stick with an HDMI plug? Does this project have a GitHub repo?
bundie•6mo ago
> Does this project have a GitHub repo?

Here you go: https://invent.kde.org/plasma/plasma-bigscreen/

MattTheRealOne•6mo ago
This is just an interface for a Linux distribution. You would still need a computer plugged into the TV to run it on. I use a Beelink mini PC with mine, but I have not tried this interface yet.
IshKebab•6mo ago
I don't understand why so many TV interfaces waste the top half of the screen with nothing...

Anyway a big flaw with custom smart TV OSes is that you won't ever get proper support for commercial services like Netflix and Prime. You can't even use Android apparently because it needs widevine nonsense that only commercial Android versions have.

prmoustache•6mo ago
I am pretty sure most netflix subscribers don't pay for the 4k enabled subscription anyway.

Are their public stats somewhere?

walthamstow•6mo ago
Not nothing, Google TV manages to fill it with a carousel of three lovely big adverts for shows you may not want members of your family to see or for networks you're not even subscribed to
FuriouslyAdrift•6mo ago
I haven't found anything more reliable and performant than a nVidia Shield Pro plus Kodi
imiric•6mo ago
Nice! I currently run KDE on my HTPC, and I might give this a try. I hope it allows playing media with external players like mpv, instead of having its own media player. A way of loading remote libraries would also be welcome.
stuaxo•6mo ago
I have an Android TV and its pretty disappointing.

If this can get some of the missing pieces sorted (like input from a remote, and a decent onscreen keyboard that works with it), it could be pretty decent.

I could imagine using some Android TV apps with this via waydroid.

shmerl•6mo ago
Plasma Mobile didn't get far, but nice to see Plasma Big Screen progressing.
linmob•6mo ago
It did not get far in market share, sure, but it never stopped going like Big Screen did and made the transition to 6 at the same time as Plasma Desktop.

Here are some recent developments:

1. https://plasma-mobile.org/2025/07/08/releases-25-07/ (also explaining that most software is part of 'Plasma Gear', which makes sense as it is software for both mobile and desktop, but has the downside of making Mobile less visible)

2. https://blogs.kde.org/2025/07/05/this-week-in-plasma-chuggin... and look for Plasma Keyboard in this post. (Personally I am a bit sad that they are seemingly abandoning Maliit, which is also used in Sailfish OS and Ubuntu Touch and is IMHO fine, but hey, at least it shows that Mobile is not dead.)

shmerl•6mo ago
I mean more like it didn't progress beyond prototype designs. It never felt polished or even close to nice looking. More like desktop Plasma UI minimized to touchscreen scenario, rather than significantly designed for it (like Sailfish). But good to see it's progressing too.
dark__paladin•6mo ago
Perfect timing. Was just about to redo my linux set top box (a beelink mini PC with Arch on it). Fucking pumped to try this out.
andsoitis•6mo ago
do you have a designer on the team?
porridgeraisin•6mo ago
+1

The first screenshot of the home screen in the article made me retch. But also, the KDE _default_ desktop has an equally weird design, so this is not really an exception.

Superblazer•6mo ago
They do, but they always use that weird design by default on KDE Plasma. It's a concious decision to go with those weird margins and spacing between elements
poly2it•6mo ago
I know people who use KDE and like it, and I'm sure it's great technically, but I don't understand why KDE chooses to be stuck with a design language which looked dated years ago, while GNOME continues to develop their style. It's not the type of tried and tested design which isn't in fashion but has remaining qualities. The design of KDE is visually displeasing and brings a poor user experience.
Maskawanian•6mo ago
You could not be more wrong. Kde is the last vestige of interfaces are powerful, pretty, and that don't their users like idiots.

You have your GNOME and simmilar ilk, be content with that and leave KDE alone.

yokljo•6mo ago
This is basically asking for a response that's just the original comment but with "KDE" and "Gnome" switched. I personally find KDE to look very nice and bring a much better and less clunky user experience than Gnome, so it's completely subjective I suppose. I congratulate the KDE contributors on continuing to make a great product even with people saying it sucks all the time.
tmtvl•6mo ago
I know, right? KDE always looks so good, it's amazing how their designers make it work so well while allowing users to fully customise everything.
porridgeraisin•6mo ago
From the install page:

> As of right now, Plasma Bigscreen isn't available for public use yet. This is due to not being developed for so long. The project has been revived, but it might take a while until it becomes stable and is available for public use.

ListeningPie•6mo ago
Will it run on the tv hardware or a computer via hdmi?
MostlyStable•6mo ago
I had a similar question. After a bit of perusing, it isn't immediately clear (especially since the install page just has a message saying it's not yet available to the public). But the following FAQ seems to suggest that it will run directly on the TV:

>Can I run Plasma Bigscreen on my TV or setup-box?

>In theory, yes. In practice, it depends.

>Hardware support is not dictated by Plasma Bigscreen, instead it depends on the devices supported by the distributions shipping it. See the install page for more details of distributions shipping Plasma Bigscreen.

nicman23•6mo ago
cec in x86 is basically not working. in arm maybe
tocs3•6mo ago
So is this something that is run on an external computer, using the TV for the display, or something else?
yjftsjthsd-h•6mo ago
Yes, it's a nice user interface to run on a computer that works well on a TV screen.
jeroenhd•6mo ago
If you can run your own Linux version on your TV, it can run on-device as well. Unfortunately not many TV manufacturers release usable Linux sources for their TVs even though they probably should be doing that.
whazor•6mo ago
A good television interface is certainly still missing on Linux. Now you either choose Android TV (which doesn’t run nicely with x86), or Steam big screen (which is missing the more media parts). But with very powerful and affordable mini PCs that can play games and media (with latest codecs), it would be much more interesting to have a great user interface that combines media watching and gaming.
Borealid•6mo ago
Kodi, which is capable of rendering directly to a framebuffer (underlying desktop env not required) is pretty good at media parts.
Nullabillity•6mo ago
That's true, but switching between all these 10ft UIs (Kodi, Steam for local games, Steam Link because its streaming client seems to be a lot less buggy than Steam's built-in one, browser for the stuff not covered above) is still kind of a mess.

If anything, things seem to have regressed slightly, since Steam removed the one good 10ft browser I'm aware of during the Steam Deck rollout.

bsimpson•6mo ago
The desktop shell feels out of place on tablet+controller devices like the Steam Deck.

Would be great if you could choose a shell like Mobile or Bigscreen that is designed for being used without a mouse.