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<title>archsetup/tests/airplane-mode, branch main</title>
<subtitle>Builds a full dev workstation from a bare Arch Linux install.
</subtitle>
<id>https://git.cjennings.net/archsetup/atom?h=main</id>
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<updated>2026-06-02T17:16:38+00:00</updated>
<entry>
<title>refactor: drop in-repo dotfiles/, move stow tooling to the dotfiles repo</title>
<updated>2026-06-02T17:16:38+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Craig Jennings</name>
<email>c@cjennings.net</email>
</author>
<published>2026-06-02T17:16:38+00:00</published>
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<id>urn:sha1:b10cba594db836c0747066addad48bda4d30cd02</id>
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Since the installer clones DOTFILES_REPO into ~/.dotfiles and stows from there, the in-repo dotfiles/ tree was dead weight. Nothing reads it at install time. I removed it (831 files) now that both machines are migrated.

The Makefile's stow / restow / reset / unstow / import targets and the dotfile-script unit suites moved to the dotfiles repo. They sit alongside the scripts they manage and run standalone (cd ~/.dotfiles &amp;&amp; make ...). This Makefile keeps the VM-integration targets and the installer-helper suite (safe-rm-rf).

I updated CLAUDE.md and README.md so stow operations run from ~/.dotfiles, and the dotfile-management, theme, and unit-test sections point at the standalone repo. The README was already describing the old in-repo model from before the installer switched to cloning. This brings it in line.
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</entry>
<entry>
<title>feat(hyprland): add airplane-mode waybar toggle</title>
<updated>2026-05-21T21:48:47+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Craig Jennings</name>
<email>c@cjennings.net</email>
</author>
<published>2026-05-21T21:48:47+00:00</published>
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<id>urn:sha1:09f4d205fe463faf676f95e798d08e8bf498be96</id>
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I added a laptop-only waybar button that drops the machine into a low-power state and restores it on a second click. Engaging turns wifi off, sets the CPU energy-performance preference to power, dims the backlight to 35%, and stops network-only services (tailscale, proton-vpn, avahi, cups, wsdd, geoclue, sshd, fail2ban, syncthing). Bluetooth is left alone so earbuds keep working.

Disengaging replays the state recorded when airplane mode was engaged rather than writing hardcoded defaults. A lever already in its low-power position is left untouched: wifi that was already off stays off, and a service that was already stopped isn't restarted.

The indicator hides itself on machines with no battery, so desktops never show the button. State lives in $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/airplane-state, and the bar refreshes the moment the toggle fires via a realtime signal.
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