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linux

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fox , in Is Systemd that bad afterall?
@fox@lemmy.fakecake.org avatar

systemd is a godsend when you need service control while getting actual work done, at scale.

there are legitimate things to criticize but in general the rants are incompetent preaching to the uninformed.

ludothegreat , in Linux for the Airheaded Layman?

I have hosed so many installs over the past 20 or so years that it’s impossible for me to guess a number. It’s part of the learning process. Just keep at it and you’ll get there.

Choctaw , in Linus Torvalds -- Creator of Linux -- defends gun regulation, woke communists, womens rights AND trans rights. Linux is political!
@Choctaw@lemmy.radio avatar

Linus has a great mind for creating and managing a Linux kernel, but like actors and others he has no qualifications for his other opinions that nobody asked for. And instead of making a lucid argument, he name calls and is rude and actually makes a fool of himself. And guns are just a tool that any law abiding citizen should be able to purchase, and I’ve used one to defend myself when my front door was kicked in at 4:30am. With our wicked drug addicted society becoming more and more lawless, the need for personal firearms has never been greater. And we already have a ton of gun regulations, background checks…

hschen , in Linux for the Airheaded Layman?
@hschen@sopuli.xyz avatar

Keep it simple, Ubuntu/Mint/PopOS, play around with it for at least a few months before trying an arch install

Qvest , in Now that Red Hat is being IBM-fied, should I leave Fedora Kinoite?

Fedora is 100% community supported. Red Hat is the primary sponsor and offers infrastructure and funding for the project, as well as full-time employees, but that’s the extent of the relationship. Red Hat doesn’t have decision-making powers. The project’s ideals force it to be open and transparent. So, if you are happy with it, stay with it. Red Hat only sponsors the Project. They don’t make decisions for the Project

Choctaw , in Linux for the Airheaded Layman?
@Choctaw@lemmy.radio avatar

I’d recommend MX Linux, which is a Debian based distribution that has dominated distrowatch.com for a long time for good reason. They have a bunch of management tools, newest Firefox… You might try just using it in VMWare Player (free) virtualization first, which has better 3D support than Virtualbox. I’m currently using MX Linux KDE Beta and it’s solid as they’re only tweaking some of their tools after the latest Debian release. And they have a good forum community for help. And Debian is the base from which Ubuntu and other distributions are built, and kind of the foundational Linux version which makes it a good place to learn Linux.

torturedllama , in Ubuntu Flavors Will Stop Using Flatpak

This is bizarre. Snap has improved a tiny bit over time, but it continues to not be that great. Meanwhile, flatpak is miles ahead. Things are generally just smoother and less annoying, even when Snap is working as intended.

Personal anecdote: I was having no end of trouble with Inkscape, it was just not working, very unreliable, all sorts of very odd issues. It got worse and worse over time to the point where it didn’t even seem to understand paths to open files anymore, if it even felt like opening that day. I tried reinstalling, clearing the config, all sorts of things. I suspected maybe the version of Inkscape Snap was giving me might have a bug in it so I was looking around for alternative ways to install an older version and then for some reason I tried Flatpak. It was like some kind of magic. Totally night and day. All of a sudden Inkscape had absolutely none of the issues that the Snap version had. It just worked. After that I realized that it hadn’t been a bug in that version of Inkscape at all, it was just Snap.

I haven’t had any issues with any other Snaps, but that incident really opened my eyes to just how bad things can get if a program isn’t packaged correctly.

pfr , in Linux for the Airheaded Layman?
@pfr@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I cannot stress this enough…

POP!_OS

20gramsWrench , in Valve's ACTUALLY working on a Steam CONSOLE!

and what do I see popping on my feed, little did we know that thing actually took off

himawari , in Jeff Geerling stops development for Redhat
@himawari@lemmy.4d2.org avatar

Truly the year of enshittification.

Zinggi57 , in Jeff Geerling stops development for Redhat
@Zinggi57@lemmy.world avatar

Wait, I only knew this name from good Ansible stuff. I had no idea he created great videos too!

bionicjoey , in Linux for the Airheaded Layman?

Arch is a bad distro for newbies. Go find an ISO for Kubuntu and install that. The install wizard is idiot-proof. I use KDE-based distros like Kubuntu even though I’m a fairly advanced user so don’t view it as some kind of failure. There’s no virtue in using more complicated stuff. Get comfortable with the easier distros first.

hendrik , in Linux for the Airheaded Layman?

Don’t start with the most complicated distro and then fail.

natecox , in Helix - A modal text editor
@natecox@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I am a fairly long time emacs user, used it as my primary editor and note taking app for around six years. I have a config large enough to warrant its own git repo separate from my normal dotfiles.

Before emacs I used vim for several years.

After really getting into Rust, I decided about three months ago to just take a look at helix and see what it was about… and I haven’t opened emacs or vim again since.

LSP and tree-sitter cover like 90% of what my old config was doing out of the box, and the kakoune inspired key bindings just felt so natural. I feel at home without the overhead of configuration paralysis.

Don’t get me wrong, helix has plenty of room to grow, but I’m excited to grow with it.

zygo_histo_morpheus , in Helix - A modal text editor

I sometimes play around with Helix and I almost always have a good time, but there are too many vim features that I have integrated in my workflow that there isn’t any good equivalent to in Helix. I use ex commands, the quickfix list, snippets, the fugitive plugin and just little custom commands and mappings that I’ve accumulated. I don’t see myself switching to any editor full time that doesn’t have a replacement for most of these features, but Helix is very nice and fun to use occasionally.

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