If you need a cheap laptop, better buy a used one than new. My ThinkPad t480 is still running perfectly fine, you just can’t play games on it.
If you need a cheap laptop, better buy a used one than new. My ThinkPad t480 is still running perfectly fine, you just can’t play games on it.
You don’t mind that each snap you install is further slowing down boot times?
I can use VM maybe but I don’t want to pay for the Windows license.
It’s free?
I’ve seen some pretty cool stuff done with ewww
For my wm+Emacs work, I unified the shortcuts by calling a separate go bin that checks if the active window is Emacs or not. If it is, it sends the command to the Emacs Daemon. If it’s not it sends the command to i3. For directional commands like move focus, first check it there’s an Emacs window to that side, if not send the command to i3.
To me it sounds like Shuah is trying to prove his position has a value while also being on this level of a power trip
They have frequent releases that introduce features and bugs, and then they squash them every week.
A stable distro like Debian will only update KDE once every ~2 years. If the version they use is full of bugs, you’re stuck with it.
On the other hand you’ve got a DE like xfce that gets a release every few years, and the Devs make sure it’s as reliable as possible to fit that stable release schedule.
Idk about the endpoints, but this seems to be targeting desktops and not servers, as those don’t have KDE.
I just feel like they wanted to do arch, but pacman -Syu
was too awkward
KDE no doubt. GNOME is a minimalist that depends on extensions to provide basic functionality, while also being a giant fatass. KDE works from the install, provides a sensible workflow, and has better tools.
But I’d only use KDE on a rolling release or a 6 month release schedule distro. Their approach to development really doesn’t suit stable ones.
I said they’re the new IE for a reason.
The w3c standard: ok so we all agreed that this feature will be placed in the body tag
Blink: ofc, that’s what I’ve been telling you
Gecko: sure, idc
WebKit: yeah nah, put it in the html
So many little senseless gotchas like that that exist for no reason that to be iSpecial
I mean the title should be “… time to move to the other browser”.
Safari is the new IE with extra iCrap on top.
Random browsers usually use one of the 3 web engines, but without browser polish, or functionalities like a working adblock. Those that don’t are just someone’s toys.
So the only real option is Firefox, and the Mozilla foundation lost 80+% of their funding because they can’t get the Google money anymore. Maybe they’ll start actually funding FF instead of some BS humanitarian work that I can bet was primarily lining their pockets…
Try it out maybe? You’re not buying a car… There’s not much point going around and asking if you spend 20 mins trying it out and realise you don’t want to use a 5 year old DE.
Basically expect the system will change only when you update to a new version, and that you’ll need to use external PMs like flatpak or nix for all user packages if you plan on doing anything more advanced than browsing and office work.
Wait till you find out about fzf
MX (Debian + Nvidia + tools to make use easier).
Debian: Release cadance seems too slow for my preference.
Install OBS and other software from flatpak
MX, ThinkPad t480, intel+Nvidia (no matter which drivers): close screen to suspend causes it, and it’s not happening in other DE’s. Can’t be bothered to try out xfce on another distro just to confirm. I made a post when I was trying to fix it for myself.
The final straw were the Bluetooth headphones though. Most of the time I’d have to manually select them 20 times as the output device so it sticks, and then it’d switch back to the speakers as soon as the call starts. Or I’d hear the other person through the correct device, but the they couldn’t hear me on Skype, but could on Google meet.
MX was pretty reliable otherwise.
Why /joke when that’s how stable distros work?
I’m aware of Debian’s reputation for not having the most up-to-date software in its repository
Yes, it’s a stable distro. Contrary to what most Linux users think, that term only means that the distro is unchanging. That means only necessary updates are released (security fixes for example).
when it will make available the upcoming major release of GIMP to 3.0.
Maybe in the next version, if the gimp release happens soon enough it gets tested.
Just use an external package manager like flatpak to install fresh packages. The only reason I could run MX (Debian) for about a year was because I installed almost every user package through nix, and used Debian ones for the system packages.
I’ve used Linux exclusively for 10+ years and dualbooted long before that, and I just now learned about that flow.