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linux

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UnfortunateShort , in What microphone are you using for Linux?

HyperX Quad Cast. Since it’s USB, it just works. Sound quality is very good for the price, but you can get better ones of course.

aleph , in Distrobox is such a cool utility! Tried it out today and don't see myself switching distress now for a long time :)
@aleph@lemm.ee avatar

It genuinely is. I really like the combination with an immutable OS like OpenSUSE Aeon because you have a super stable base that you can add whatever packages you need to via distrobox.

20watts , in whats so good about arch compared to linux mint?

Customization, lots of apps (via aur), no bloat

ellesper , in Is anyone using Asahi Linux?
@ellesper@lemmy.world avatar

It works alright but there are still issues. My biggest gripe with it is that sleeping doesn’t really work. I will often close my laptop and then come back to a dead laptop the next day because the battery drained all night.

TrivialBetaState ,

Is that all? I can live with that! A few months ago that I checked there were a lot more open issues.

I guess my biggest difficulty will be that the Macbook is my wife’s new laptop and she’ll kill me if I change the OS… again!

joey ,

It’s not worth dying over.

sickday OP ,
@sickday@kbin.social avatar

Ah yeah that's pretty inconvenient. Does suspend work with a button push/shortcut, or is it broken altogether?

aport ,

That happens to me with macOS too so 🤷

Spectacle8011 , in Rethinking Window Management on GNOME – Space and Meaning
@Spectacle8011@lemmy.comfysnug.space avatar

As long as the windows are being maximised into a workspace you can jump to with SUPER+[0-9], this seems interesting, if overly reliant on the mouse.

Remmy , in What microphone are you using for Linux?
@Remmy@kbin.social avatar

Shure SM7B with a dbx 286s preamp going out to a Focusrite Scarlett Solo USB Audio Interface.

nik282000 , in What microphone are you using for Linux?
@nik282000@lemmy.ml avatar

I have a Zoom, it appears as a USB audio input device, never gave me any issues.

FreeBooteR69 , in What microphone are you using for Linux?
@FreeBooteR69@kbin.social avatar

MAONO AU-PM421. Works otb no muss no fuss.

Professional_Human ,
@Professional_Human@lemmy.world avatar

Same experience with the AU-PM422 I bought in November of 2020

Works perfectly fine for Discord and OBS

a.co/d/62Mqanh

thejevans , in What microphone are you using for Linux?
@thejevans@lemmy.ml avatar

I use a Audio Technica AT2040 with a Focusrite Scarlett 8i6 audio interface.

Max_P , in whats so good about arch compared to linux mint?
@Max_P@lemmy.max-p.me avatar

That’s essentially an extremely subjective question. Arch is well-liked but not for everyone.

When you boot up the ArchLinux ISO to install it, what you get on the screen is:

<pre style="background-color:#ffffff;">
<span style="color:#323232;">root@archiso ~ #
</span>

That’s it. It doesn’t ask you what language you want to speak or which keyboard layout you want to use. You get a zsh shell, and that’s it. Go figure out what you want to install, how you want to install it, where you want to install it to. That’s how basically all of Arch works: if you install something, it comes barebones with sometimes the default starting configuration shipped by whoever made the software and nothing else.

To me, that’s what makes Arch so good compared to something like Linux Mint: I’m an advanced user, I don’t want training wheels, and I want to build my system entirely from scratch, with only what I want on it installed and running. And it comes with excellent documentation, is a rolling release (meaning, you get the latest version of everything fairly quickly). Since Arch pretty much only ships packages for you to install, it’s not nearly as important to make sure that they work and there isn’t any incompatibility with other packages. Oh the newer version of X doesn’t work with Y anymore? Too bad, go figure out how to downgrade it or figure out a workaround.

Is this useful to you, a beginner? It depends. If you want to go into the deep ends and learn everything about how a Linux system is built and works, sure, it’s going to be great for that. Lots of people do that and love it! If you’re coming from Windows, all you’re used to is clicking next next finish, and you like things to just work out of the box, eehh, probably not great for you.


Distributions like Linux Mint does a lot of the work for you: first of all, it has a graphical installer. It boots up and asks you about your language, your keyboard, where you want to install it. And it installs a system that’s ready to be used out of the box. When you install Linux Mint, you get a desktop, a web browser, you get drivers configured for you. It detects what’s the best graphics drivers and prompts you to install them automatically.

Most distributions, especially Debian/Ubuntu derived ones, are all about providing a curated experience. It comes with a whole bunch of stuff installed and configured to reasonable defaults. Need to print something? Yeah it comes with printer support by default, just plug in your printer and it’ll configure it for you. Some distributions even comes with Steam and Discord and everything needed to game ready to go right out of the box. Log in and play.

To provide such a reliable and out of the box experience, these distributions typically work with a release cycle, or delay updates to have time to properly test them out and make sure they work correctly before they ship it out to users. This means you may be a few versions behind on your desktop environment, but you also get the assurance you won’t update and your desktop doesn’t work anymore.


I personally picked Arch a long time ago because I’m fundamentally a tinkerer, I want the newest version of everything even if it means breaking things temporarily, and I do kind of whacky things overall. One day my laptop is there for working and browsing the web, another day it’s an iPXE server to install 20 other computers, another day it’s a temporary router/WiFi access point, another day it’s a media center/TV box, another day it’s an Android tablet. Arch gives me the freedom to make my computer do whatever I need my computer to do at the moment, and because it doesn’t make any assumptions about what I want to do with my computer, I can easily make it do all of those things on a whim. On Linux Mint, I’d be fighting an uphill battle to tear down everything the developers spent so much time building for me and my convenience.

pnutzh4x0r , in What microphone are you using for Linux?
@pnutzh4x0r@lemmy.world avatar

Not sure about studio quality, but for video conferencing and doing some Twitch streams, I’ve being using a Blue Yeti Nano USB microphone for a few years (since COVID) with no issues on Linux.

Yewb , in Almost 40% of Ubuntu users vulnerable to new privilege elevation flaws

Needs a user account on the system (even unprivledged accounts) via overlayfs

Overlayfs allows one, usually read-write, directory tree to be overlaid onto another, read-only directory tree. All modifications go to the upper, writable layer. This type of mechanism is most often used for live CDs but there is a wide variety of other uses.

Mothra , in What distribution is most used in production environment
@Mothra@mander.xyz avatar

I’m seeing a lot of very interesting answers but I’m wondering what you mean by “production environment”.

Do you mean VFX Production? (English not my first language so if “production” is used in different industries, well, I didn’t know).

I’m new to the industry and worked for small companies that don’t use Linux. But my VFX peeps use Rocky, Mint, and Ubuntu ( stronger preference for Rocky in studios).

xapr ,

In IT in the US, “production” is commonly used to refer to systems that support actual business operations. In other words, it’s as opposed to “development” or “testing” systems.

Mothra ,
@Mothra@mander.xyz avatar

Thanks! So I gather the default is IT and not VFX, fair enough. It makes sense.

xapr ,

You’re welcome! Yes, I believe so.

isame ,

In this context production means servers or machines which make money in a business. The partner term is normally staging: a testbed environment.

over_clox , in Is there a way to get the old ubuntu boot screen in 23.04?

I don’t have an exact answer for you, as I don’t even know what distro your ‘old’ version was.

Linux is mostly open source, but people can’t help you as much with a ‘purple background and 4 dots’ description as they can with exactly what distro you were once running.

millionsofplayers OP ,

I meant this

VeeSilverball , in whats so good about arch compared to linux mint?
@VeeSilverball@kbin.social avatar

Arch is always "latest and greatest" for every package, including the kernel. It lets you tinker, and it's always up to date. However, a rolling release introduces more ways to break your system - things start conflicting under the hood in ways that you weren't aware of, configurations that worked don't any longer, etc.

This is in contrast to everything built on Debian, which Mint is one example of - Mint adds a bunch of conveniences on top, but the underlying "how it all fits together" is still Debian. What Debian does is to set a target for stable releases and ship a complete set of known-stable packages. This makes it great for set and forget uses, servers that you want to just work and such. And it was very important back in the 90's when it was hard to get Internet connectivity. But it also means that it stays behind the curve with application software releases, by periods of months to a year+. And the original workaround to that is "just add this other package repository" which, like Arch, can eventually break your system by accident.

But neither disadvantage is as much of a problem now as it used to be. More of the software is relatively stable, and the stuff you need to have the absolute latest for, you can often find as a flatpak, snap, or appimage - formats that are more self-contained and don't rely on the dependencies that you have installed, just "download and run."

Most popular distros now are Arch or Debian flavored - same system, different veneer. Debian itself has become a better option for desktop in recent years just because of improvements to the installer.

I've been using Solus 4.4 lately, which has its own rolling-release package system. Less software, but the experience is tightly designed for desktop, and doesn't push me to open terminals to do things like the more classical Unix designs that guide Arch and Debian. The problem both of those face as desktops is that they assume up-front that you may only have a terminal, so the "correct way" of doing everything tends to start and end with the terminal, and the desktop is kind of glued on and works for some things but not others.

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