There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

linux

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

Flaky , in Has anyone used or contributed to OpenStreetMap?
@Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

I rarely use any maps, but OpenStreetMap is used by Rate Your Music to show where artists you’ve rated at least once came from.

mudamuda , in What is the most opinionated linux distro?
@mudamuda@geddit.social avatar

On Endless or Ubuntu you could install Brave in one click but it will be Flatpak or Snap.

deong , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?

I use Arch because it is generally the easiest one I’ve found to pretend it’s 2010 again. Most Linux distributions are fine, but they’ve all been busy trying to solve problems I don’t have and accepting that some niche corner cases are fine to break. I’m just a niche corner case in general.

I have nothing against Wayland trying to modernize the UI stack, but if their answer to half the things I need is “well the compositor should do that” and the compositor doesn’t in fact do that yet, then I don’t want to use Wayland yet. I have nothing against Flatpak trying to modernize application packaging, but their current story for making applications available from a shell is effectively “why do you want to do that”, and well…I do want to do that, so I guess I don’t really want to use Flatpak yet.

That’s just me. Like I said…I’m a corner case. I understand that everyone else wants their computer to be an appliance that does what most people need without requiring any tinkering. And I’m not opposed to getting rid of the need to tinker. I’m too old to view tinkering to make something work as I thing I look forward to. I just view tinkering as a one-time cost with perpetual returns. I’m OK editing an xkb file to make some obscure input device work the way I want it to, because that might take me an afternoon, and then I just have that device do exactly what I want for the rest of its life with no further effort. Make it so that I never have to edit another xkb file again and I’ll be just fine. But you can’t do it by just saying, “no more needing xkbcomp because it doesn’t work anymore, and if you needed it, go see if the compositor vendor will write some code for you”.

DniMam , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?

An immutable OS with flatpak, snap or appimage :

Fedora silverblue, nixos, vanilla os, guix, steam deck…

While there is still lot limitation using only flatpak, snap or appimage, i believe that in the next decade they will slowly grow and end up that packaging nightmare.

So we can have an OS up to date, latest app without worrying any breakage. But i’m not well versed and dunno if people and dev will follow that road.

I think it’s time to ditch apt, dnf, rpm, aur. I imagine it would ease dev work but i’m not sure.

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

I just started to like GNOME. It used to be terrible and I’m getting to that phase where I just want things to work. Vanilla GNOME is good enough. Only thing I really change is Dock from Dash, where dock shows up on hover and hides otherwise. My opinion is that should be default.

cybersandwich ,

It absolutely stupid that the dock isn’t default

banazir , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?
@banazir@lemmy.ml avatar

Every time I’ve tried using modern GNOME it’s like pulling teeth. I hate it. I think it has actual usability issues. Not disparaging anyone who likes it, it just really doesn’t suit me.

GNOME classic shell was ok, but when I installed KDE Plasma it was like coming home. Everything made sense and everything was where it needed to be. More or less.

In the end I’m just glad Linux has a variety of DEs to choose from. Even if you choose GNOME, you weirdo.

fhein ,

I think it’s some kind of modern UX design philosophy; Remove everything except the most basic features to make it less confusing for computer illiterate users. Then label the rest of the features as “advanced” and either hide them behind some menus or in a separate program. Obviously that doesn’t mean that everybody who likes Gnome and similarly designed software is computer illiterate, but it’s difficult to make one glove that fits all. Kind of like those failed experiments to make a unified OS for desktops, tablets and phones…

When Gnome 3 was announced I thought it was cool that they tried something new, and I really wanted to like it. I’ve given it a couple of more chances over the years, to see if it has changed more to my liking, but after a few weeks of use I always replace it with something else… The way the UX is designed just reminds me too much of what I dislike about Windows. Having to use dconf editor to change settings feels just like being forced to use regedit.

Firefox also tried to go down this road IMO, but have reverted some of the worst changes and can be made almost to my liking with the help of extensions. Personally I like Vivaldi better but I think it’s important to keep Firefox alive so that Chromium/Blink doesn’t get complete monopoly.

Mishaye , in Why did no one mention this to me?
@Mishaye@lemmy.world avatar

It’s very useful, but occasionally I’m not able to install some distro using ventoy and have to give it its own dedicated USB stick. Most works fine though.

yamapikariya OP ,
@yamapikariya@lemmyfi.com avatar

Like which? Just curious just in case I come across those.

Voytrekk ,
@Voytrekk@lemmy.world avatar

I had issues with ChimeraOS. Its install process is different though.

ablackcatstail , in glowing brighter than the sun
@ablackcatstail@lemmy.goblackcat.com avatar

I think people are generally missing the point that this was intended to be humorous. I know I got a chuckle out of it.

gkpy , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?

unless we’re talking about my main machine, which runs gentoo, i’ll always default to alpine. super solid base system and packages. super accessible when it comes to upstreaming packages. I only wish they had s6 as an option for init/service manager

alternateved ,
@alternateved@lemmy.one avatar

Gentoo and Alpine are both really great distributions.

amyipdev , in Can you please ELI5 tmux?

Tmux is essentially an extension of the concept of running ideas in the background. Like 0xtero mentioned, you use a sort of “virtual terminal” that is persistent (unlike the jobs system you might be familiar with on your shell).

Now, some people do just use it to split the screen. The idea is it can have multiple terminals, show them, and manage them - it is thus a “multiplexer”, which is where it gets its name (tmux = terminal multiplexer). If you’re on a terminal-only system, this isn’t that bad of a usage.

Say you’re compiling a large program, like the Linux kernel, and you want to step away, maybe even close the terminal and come back later. Tmux is great for this. You can start the compile in tmux, “detach” (stop viewing it) from it, and it’ll still run full-speed in the background. When you want to look at it again, or check the status, you just re-attach.

Mane25 , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?

I really like it, the constraints works for me to enforce more efficient habits. I would say I’m not a naturally efficient person, I recognise that and, essentially, benefit from having a workflow created for me. With KDE, it has the customisability out of the box to create your own workflow, but I couldn’t personally design a good workflow.

But I’m not everyone, of course, and I would say GNOME is not necessarily for everybody.

Good that you gave it a fair shot. I feel like a lot of people just throw a lot of extinctions at it first without trying to understand the vanilla workflow - I used to be one of them until I tried vanilla for about 3 months.

aaaantoine , (edited )

I feel like vanilla GNOME is intentionally a barbones common workflow, and that extensions are how you customize to fit your needs.

For example, I often switch between desktop speakers and headphones (where the dongle is always connected), and sometimes other audio devices. I installed the sound input/output chooser so I don’t have to go into Settings every time I need to switch inputs. It saves me multiple clicks. But I get that not everyone needs immediate access to change audio devices, so why clutter the UI?

I’ve used both vanilla GNOME and the post-Unity Ubuntu spin on it. In either case I’ve grown accustomed to the Activities screen, quickly accessing it pressing the Super key, and using it to switch windows and manage full screen apps on different monitors.

bluetoque ,

What, is there no system tray? What was wrong with the system tray??

aaaantoine ,

If I remember correctly, there’s already a system tray icon that lets you adjust volume on your current devices. The extension adds the ability to switch devices from that drop down instead of drilling into the settings app.

Mane25 ,

I feel that way about the default GNOME apps as well, they all provide the basic functionality that most users need, since specialist users would install specialist apps anyway.

One extension I won’t install is dash-to-dock or similar (I know some people like it and that’s fine), because being made to switch to the Activities view once you have too many windows to alt+tab between provides a useful psychological prompt to close unused windows or move stuff to other workspaces. That’s one of the things I most like about the GNOME workflow.

Sivaru , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?

Try Void Linux, or just stay at Arch. If you want to try Nixos (my current distro), watch this video www.youtube.com/watch?v=AGVXJ-TIv3Y .

PipedLinkBot ,

Here is an alternative Piped link(s): piped.video/watch?v=AGVXJ-TIv3Y

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.

netvor ,
@netvor@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve checked voidlinux.org, looks nice but there is no screenshot! How can I decide without screenshot?

/s

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

I tried using it multiple times over the years, including for multiple months on my laptop at one point, but couldn’t get myself to accept it. Even with extensions, I couldn’t accept many of the weird design decisions.

It always felt to me like the Gnome designers wanted to create a combination of Windows 8 Metro and Mac OS: The shittiest Windows UI ever combined with the ergonomics of Mac OS (which is foreign to Windows users) and the lack of customizability of Apple products. Hyper optimized for touch screens even though most Linux users are on a mouse&keyboard or laptop. Even the Steam Deck’s desktop mode is perfectly usuable despite KDE not being as optimized for touch as Gnome.

0x4E4F , in glowing brighter than the sun
@0x4E4F@lemmy.fmhy.ml avatar

Hey, bo one’s forcing anyone to use a corp distro. I ditched Ubuntu comoletely as soon as I saw a pro feature in it. Now I’m on Void exclusively.

dartanjinn ,

Isn’t Ubuntu Pro free for individuals?

0x4E4F ,
@0x4E4F@lemmy.fmhy.ml avatar

I don’t know, but any feature like that makes me wanna steer away from that product.

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

I love gnome Click activities, go to the screen you want, click the program you want… so simple what you are on about man.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines