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linux

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The_Zen_Cow_Says_Mu , in Anyone else starting to favor Flatpak over native packages?

recently rebased from fedora to debian, and reinstalling apps through flathub was ridiculously easy because all the settings and data were preserved in /home. also flatpaks incorporate newer mesa than what comes with debian stable, so it’s an easy way to stick with a stable distro but also be up-to-date in userspace.

cyberic , in Thoughts on Windows and WSL?
@cyberic@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Personally, I think booting into a linux distro through a USB drive might be more what you’re looking for, but for trying specific applications WSL is great.

vampatori , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?
@vampatori@feddit.uk avatar

Yes, I love it! Really it’s the MacOS-like “Expose” feature that I find to be essential.

I would advise against using workspaces though, I find those actually sort of go against the core idea of it IMO. There are a few things I’d really like added to it, but for the most-part when you get into it it’s great.

My main desktop I have 4 monitors (I know, but once you start a monitor habit it’s really hard to not push it to the limit - this is only the beginning!) It roughly breaks down into:

  1. Primary work (usually a full-screen editor)
  2. Terminals (different windows, some for the project, some monitoring)
  3. Browsers - documentation, various services, my own code output
  4. Communication - signal, discord, what’s app (ugh), etc.

The key, literally, is you just press the Super key and boom, you can see everything and if you want to interact with something it’s all available in just one click or a few of key presses away.

On my laptop with just one screen, I find it equally invaluable, and is actually where I started to use it the most - once again, just one press of Super and I can see all the applications I have open and quickly select one or launch something.

It’s replaced Alt + Tab for me - and I know they’ve made that better, and added Super + Tab, but none of them are as good as just pressing Super.

The things I’d really love added to it are:

  • Better tiling (including quarter tiling). It’s a sad state of affairs when Windows has far better tiling than Gnome.
  • Super then Search, I’d like it to filter the windows it’s showing and shrink/hide the others, along with a simple way to choose one using the keyboard.
  • Rather than having an icon for each window, I also want the tooltip information to always be shown (e.g. vs code project) and for standard apps to expose better information for that (e.g. Gnome Terminal to expose its prompt/pwd) and/or have a specific mechanism by which apps could communicate.
  • Adding Quicksilver-like functionality to the launcher/search would be amazing. e.g.
    • Super
    • Sp… (auto-populates Spotify)
    • Tab
    • P… (auto-populates Play/Pause)
    • Return
  • Session restoration - it just doesn’t work at the moment for some reason. Some apps do, some don’t. Some go to their correct position/size, some don’t.
sab ,

I would advise against using workspaces [...] My main desktop I have 4 monitors

Hahaha, figures. I mostly only use my laptop monitor, and absolutely depend on workspaces in everything I do. I rarely have more than four open, but I really like that it's flexible.

For me the default Gnome workflow is fantastic. I feel like there are always two quick ways of doing anything I want, either with touch pad gestures or with the keyboard depending on situation. I get frustrated trying to use anything else.

vampatori ,
@vampatori@feddit.uk avatar

I did start with it and use it on a laptop, honestly I think that’s where it shines the most - but I guess the more windows you open the less useful it becomes. I think if there was a way to do the expose-like “view all things at once” (Super key) that worked across all workspaces, I’d be all over them. But as there’s no easy way to live view everything on all workspaces, I just don’t use them.

mudamuda , in glowing brighter than the sun
@mudamuda@geddit.social avatar

Sun is now Oracle anyway.

lemminer , in Which M.2 SSD for Linux?

I’m using WD. No issues.

M_Reimer OP ,

How do you update firmware on this SSD?

lemminer ,

On their site it says you need Western Digital Dashboard, which requires windows. I’m not sure/haven’t bothered myself as of now on Linux.

corsicanguppy ,

I think some of my units are on the ‘lgtm’ update plan too. ;-)

milicent_bystandr , in Can someone explain to me the difference between "community-driven" and "corporate-driven" distributions and its implications?

what would happen to distribution X if Canonical suddeny made Ubuntu closed-source?

I believe Linux Mint has done some planning for if Ubuntu does something like that - probably to rebase off Debian in that case

crazyroostereye , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?

I personally find Gnome works best on Laptops using the Touch pad with its Gesture controlls. But yeah there are things like the missing application tray that can be annoying which can only be added with extensions. Which is annoying again. So pure Gnome is the bare minimum and can work, but with extensions it can bekomm extremely good. In my opinion.

sandayle , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?
@sandayle@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

I tried it twice and hated it. Maybe it’s because I’m in love with KDE but that’s not the only reason.

shapis OP ,
@shapis@lemmy.ml avatar

I loved the KDE layout, everything about it, except it was very very buggy on my system to the point.

stefenauris ,
@stefenauris@pawb.social avatar

I feel the same way lol. However I never figured out what “activities” was supposed to be used for in KDE so I just ignored it.

matricaria , in Has anyone used or contributed to OpenStreetMap?

Yes I use OSM almost exclusively and have contributed to it.

Where I live, in Germany, OSM is pretty much on the same level as Google Maps and way better than Apple Maps. Sometimes there is outdated info but you can quickly correct it. Sometimes I double check stuff with GM. Some information is even better than GM. But I think Germany has a pretty strong OSM community, at least in my city.

I use Organic Maps on iOS.

schmurian ,
@schmurian@lsmu.schmurian.xyz avatar

Same here. I downloaded it recently to have a look and just realized how easy it is to update information for places that I frequently visit. What I like about that is that I can add information isn‘t listed in any map, because shop owners other people responsible don‘t bother (yes, people like this exist).

meldrik , (edited )

Doesn’t Apple Maps use data from OSM? Edit: They actually do. At least in Denmark.

https://i.imgur.com/iHfOXw0.jpg

matricaria ,

Kinda, the information is definitely not the same.

meldrik ,

It might be specific data and not everything, that Apple uses from OSM.

diaphanous ,

Hey, another German here and I’ve been using OSMAnd for android for years, but I’ve never contributed. How can I get into it easily?

matricaria ,

Make an account on OSM, find something wrong on the map, update it.

Start with your commute or places you go. Check the information, I often find wrong opening hours. Maybe some constitution altered something. You’ll find something.

carlytm , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?

I’m not really using “vanilla” GNOME since I have a number of extensions, but the only one that really modifies the workflow is Tray Icons: Reloaded.

That said, while it’s definitely not for everyone, I’m very comfortable with it. I like that everything feels “out of my way” unless I need it, and I find the Activities view to be easier for finding a minimized program at a glance than a taskbar.

estebanlm ,
@estebanlm@lemmy.ml avatar

Same. I love it and I don’t know how I spent so much time not-using it :)

Meseta , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?
@Meseta@sh.itjust.works avatar

I love Gnome. But I have a pretty simple workflow where I don’t use many applications. Generally I have a browser and terminal open and that’s it.

I do all my window management inside of Tmux, which is effectively my actual window manager.

I’ve tried KDE in the past but I’ve never liked how it feels like a stepping stone for the Windows interface – not a huge fan of pullout menus. I’ve been using Linux exclusively for almost twenty years so I don’t have any love for that UX.

I used to use a lot of simple/tiling window managers when I was younger and more patient, Gnome feels similar to those in how it has very few bells and whistles to get in your way.

If only maintaining extensions was easier, it feels like every major release breaks every extension for something stupid like renaming a constant. The Gnome team seems to put very little consideration into making the JS extension API stable.

Meseta , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?
@Meseta@sh.itjust.works avatar

I love Gnome. But I have a pretty simple workflow where I don’t use many applications. Generally I have a browser and terminal open and that’s it.

I do all my window management inside of Tmux, which is effectively my actual window manager.

I’ve tried KDE in the past but I’ve never liked how it feels like a stepping stone for the Windows interface – not a huge fan of pullout menus. I’ve been using Linux exclusively for almost twenty years so I don’t have any love for that UX.

I used to use a lot of simple/tiling window managers when I was younger and more patient, Gnome feels similar to those in how it has very few bells and whistles to get in your way.

If only maintaining extensions was easier, it feels like every major release breaks every extension for something stupid like renaming a constant. The Gnome team seems to put very little consideration into making the JS extension API stable.

mudamuda , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?
@mudamuda@geddit.social avatar

BTW there was a nice idea behind the only close button in early GNOME 3. Apps were intended to save the state on exit, so one doesn’t need to minimize windows, they can close it and reopen at any time and see the exact content of a window. But GNOME completely has failed to deliver that idea.

What makes things worse, there was no clear way to keep apps on the background when the main window is closed. It was seemed as antifeature. But that was a different world where weren’t so much of internet service applications running on the background 24h a day. Now there is a background portal but with quite minimal support in the DE.

rodneyck , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?
@rodneyck@lemmy.world avatar

You are not alone. Many love its ‘restrained’ workflow, and DEs are subjective. It sounds like you are ready to move to KDE. KDE has a ‘Overview’ that mimics Gnome’s, so best of both worlds and the taskbar in KDE is actually functional. Don’t waste anymore time, make the switch to day. Operators are standing by. 🤣

entropicdrift , in What developments in the Linux world are you looking forward to the most?
@entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Mesa 23.2 enabling ray tracing by default on all RDNA 2 and 3 cards using RADV

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