I know you're looking for a desktop solution, but here's something that you can try in case you can't find one -- I'm betting that having a solution is better than having none!
So I just had a quick muck around:
You can use pgrep to detect if a process with a given name is running
You can write to /dev/pts/0 to trigger a desktop notification
You can drop it into a cron job to run it automatically on a schedule
As a test, the following command will look for a process called syncthing and send a desktop notification if it can't find it:
bash
pgrep syncthing || echo "Syncthing is not running > /dev/pts/0"
To set up a cron job:
open a terminal
open the editor with crontab -e (if you need to pick an editor, nano will probably be your best bet, it's easiest to use)
in the editor, add the following line to the end of the file: 0 * * * * pgrep syncthing || echo "Syncthing is not running" > /dev/pts/0
The 0 * * * * sets up the schedule (on the 0th minute of every hour, every day of the month, every month, on every day of the week)
Everything after that is the command to run
save and quit
If you ever want to get rid of it, just open the cron file again (crontab -e) and remove the line.
I gave this a go on KDE under Wayland and it seems to do the trick.
Good luck, I hope you find what you're looking for!
[edit-1] added step (2) to install libnotify-bin in case you don't have it already.
[edit-2] added XDG_RUNTIME_DIR to step (4)
[edit-3] removed references to libnotify, replace with /dev/pts/0 (Nice one, @sun_is_ra@sh.itjust.works !)
Hello! I don’t know of a desktop watchdog application that will do this for you, but you may be able to achieve this with a simple cron job. Probably just an hourly crontab entry that looks for a running process with the right name, and uses something like notify-send to send an alert if it’s not found.
I’ll jump on the computer and have a quick play, though I run gnome not plasma so I don’t know how well it will translate.
Not sure if you’re familiar or not with the Ig Nobel Prize (the “ig”is important - it’s not the same as the Nobel Prize), but it’s a kind of parody-but-not of the Nobel prize. It typically covers off-beat or weird science, to “honor achievements that first make people laugh, and then make them think.”
It’s about as quirky as the science it covers:
Miss Sweetie Poo, a little girl who repeatedly cries out, "Please stop: I'm bored", in a high-pitched voice if speakers go on too long
Throwing paper planes onto the stage is a long-standing tradition. For many years Professor Roy J. Glauber swept the stage clean of the airplanes as the official "Keeper of the Broom". Glauber could not attend the 2005 awards because he was traveling to Stockholm to claim a genuine Nobel Prize in Physics.
Calling each subsequent event the “first” is definitely on brand!
Don’t know much about the training side of things, but I have Piper set up with home assistant using the Wyoming protocol and it just goes. Some of the out-of-the-box voices are pretty decent too.
However, if you’ve been following Android platform development news lately, you may have heard of something called the trunk stable project. Without getting too technical, the way that Google develops Android has significantly changed. The first Android version to be released as part of the trunk stable project was Android 14 QPR2 back in March, which is why that release used a very different build ID naming scheme. Instead of having build IDs that started with the letter “U” for Upside Down Cake, Android 14 QPR2 had build IDs that started with the letter “A.”
Robinson was making an appearance at the Mayberry truck show in Mount Airy when he was injured, campaign spokesperson Mike Lonergan said in a statement.
Robinson was treated at Northern regional hospital in Mount Airy for second-degree burns, he added.
Joe Emerson had been struggling over the death of his best friend, Scott, a pilot who died while on a run six years earlier. Emerson had been away for the weekend with friends, celebrating and remembering Scott.
…
On Friday night, the group took psychedelic mushrooms – a drug that can make you hallucinate and typically has effects that last a few hours. Emerson said that for him, the physical side effects lasted days, and the consequences a lifetime.
…
"There are two red handles in front of my face," Emerson recalled. "And thinking that I was going to wake up, thinking this is my way to get out of this non-real reality, I reached up and I grabbed them, and I pulled the levers."
The second case that begins next month began with a lawsuit filed in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia by the Justice Department and eight states in December 2020, during former President Trump’s administration.
Prosecutors allege that since at least 2015 Google has thwarted meaningful competition and deterred innovation through its ownership of the entities and software that power the online advertising technology market.
Hot take: if people have a legitimate opinion that needing to sign up for an Epic account is something that they didn’t anticipate / don’t like / don’t want to do, then it is a fair and valid review and not “review bombing”.
For everyone who wanted to know what a fish would look like if it was a sock puppet, now you know.
Nature’s wild.