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linux

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

Yes. With many windows open but I don’t use workspaces. Alt-Tab, and Alt-“above tab” is enough to me. And you can always super, first chars of the app name, enter.

SmokeInFog , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?
@SmokeInFog@midwest.social avatar

Nope, not even a little bit. That’s why I use Cinnamon. On the workspace front, though, I do use those heavily. It helps to have dedicated workspaces. On my home setup I have a sidedesk for Obsidian and PDF reading; a hobby bench for tinkering with linux, my network, and coding; a main for webrowsing and general info gathering; one for gaming (steam and lutris live there); and one for communications like discord, signal, matrix, etc.

Nihil ,

Cinnamon here too. I haven’t tried them all, but it’s support for fractional scaling is the best I can find.

z2k_ ,
@z2k_@lemmy.nz avatar

If only Cinnamon would add wayland support

SmokeInFog ,
@SmokeInFog@midwest.social avatar

Yeah, I’m definitely waiting on that

dandroid , in Thoughts on Windows and WSL?

WSL2 is good, but not usable in all scenarios. IIRC, it can’t use systemd services. It is also very slow with file I/O, which is not a problem with small datasets, but some of the git repos I work with are so big that git operations take a couple of minutes to complete in WSL2, but only take a second or so in PowerShell. If you are doing a full backup of your PC with rsync or something like that, it could take days to complete something that would take only 30 minutes or so running in a native Windows shell.

wmassingham ,
PseudoSpock ,

Wish I could say that was an improvement.

Voytrekk ,
@Voytrekk@lemmy.world avatar

It depends on where the files are located. If they are within your WSL distro, then speed is similar to a Linux VM. If you need to do large operations on Windows files from WSL, WSLv1 is a better option.

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

I like it, even though I’m not sure if I would call it the GNOME official workflow (is that even a thing?). I usually don’t get close to having 10 applications open. I tend to work with about 1 to 3 workspaces with various applications based on my needs. Furthermore, I keep the windows non-maximized which helps me condense more information yone screen

shapis OP ,
@shapis@lemmy.ml avatar

Mhmm. It feels great while I’m up to 3 workspaces. It just gets sketch when you have, an IDE + browser + pdf reader for documentation + one or two communication apps + a drawing board + … you get the idea.

Eeyore_Syndrome , in What developments in the Linux world are you looking forward to the most?
@Eeyore_Syndrome@sh.itjust.works avatar

HDR and HDMI 2.1 support would be nice.

Some TVs don’t have display ports eh.

And maybe we wanna enjoy 7.1 audio on our fancy ATMOS setups.

FrostyCaveman , in What developments in the Linux world are you looking forward to the most?

Two things at completely opposite ends of the “Linux world”:

  • eBPF. It seems super promising for improving observability and security; especially performance of these concerns. It also strikes me as a risky architectural decision. Programmable privileged kernel code + JIT. What could go wrong… that validator sure is doing heavy lifting.
  • Valve flexing more muscle in developing Proton as it comes to terms with the fact Microsoft’s vertical integration (and monopolistic practices increasingly unfettered by government) will eventually be an existential risk to it. It is now ridiculously easy to install and run so many games on Linux, so long as you accept the devil you know and it’s DRMy platform. Definitely not perfect but it’s so vastly improved I’m comfortable calling it “night and day”
jaykstah ,

The Valve one has been the most exciting for me. AFAIK Valve has been thinking about the issues with Windows controlling PC gaming since Windows 8 first came out. The Steam Machines were a flop at the time but in recent years they’ve been able to maks big moves for Linux gaming and instead of giving up has been doubling down on the importance of it.

FrostyCaveman ,

Ahh yes the Steam Machines. Definitely contemporaneous with windows 8.

I think it’s likely Valve have intensified efforts recently for a number of reasons but not least of which is the ongoing encroachment of Microsoft turning the Windows PC experience into more of a walled garden across more segments. It can’t have gone unnoticed that Microsoft are 1) selling games on the Microsoft Store and 2) are normalising the concept of hardware root of trust etc with the windows 11 TPM requirement.

EFI secure boot was one thing. Setting conditions up so every PC in the world has hardware support for verifying that user space programs are signed by Microsoft is another. I’m not saying overnight they’ll flick a switch and every windows installation in the world is on S mode. But it’s clearly trending that way. That would be good night for Steam if they so chose. And clearly Microsoft believe they can fob off regulators well enough

Bishma , in What developments in the Linux world are you looking forward to the most?
@Bishma@social.fossware.space avatar

Wine + Wayland for sure. It’s time to let X11 rest, it’s earned it.

Nuuskis9 ,

What do you mean? I play games with Lutris on Wayland without issues.

OsrsNeedsF2P ,

It goes through XWayland, whereas Wine on Wayland would do away with that later

fugepe ,

Its all finished, the main developer is porting the source code by patches so its easier for the MR to get accepted by the Wine devs.

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

This is what I drive too, at work we have RHEL though, and we’re required to use RHEL base images for our containers. UBI-minimal is small enough though

alternateved , in Does anyone actually like the default GNOME workflow?
@alternateved@lemmy.one avatar

Yes, I thrive in it.

djsaskdja ,

I’ve always compared it to a window manager, but with a mouse focus instead of the keyboard. It feels very natural to me.

alternateved ,
@alternateved@lemmy.one avatar

And with lots of polish and convenient features.

Mane25 ,

You think GNOME is mouse-focused? Perhaps more compared to a window manager but I usually touch my mouse less than I would in most other DE’s.

PriorProject , in What is you backup tool of choice?

I’ve used a combination of

  • Managing ZFS snapshots with pyznap
  • Plain old rsync to copy important files that happen not to be on ZFS filesystems to ZFS.

If I were doing this over today, I’d probably consider zrepl.github.io instead of pyznap, as pyznap is no longer receiving real active development.

In the past I’ve used rdiff-backup, which is great but it’s hard to beat copy-on-write snapshots for speed and being lightweight.

gzrrt , in What is you backup tool of choice?
@gzrrt@kbin.social avatar

Only syncthing, for me.

js10 , in Linux phones

I started daily driving a PinePhone with Mobian over two years ago, upgraded to a PinePhonePro when they first came out, and then I finally got my Librem5 about a month ago. They have come a long way. The core functions you’d expect from a phone work; calls, texts (SMS and MMS), camera (pictures and video), email, web browsing, all that works perfectly fine on my Librem5. However, I understand they are not for everyone. While there are things like twitter and mastodon clients for Linux you are not going to get a banking app for a Linux phone (for example). I just use the browser for those kinds of things though.

CaptainHowdy ,

The things keeping me from fully migrating to Linux on mobile are apps like Uber/lyft. They don’t have a web ui version, but I actually use them often. Also google maps navigation doesnt have any realistic alternative in my experience.

js10 ,

Not having apps like Uber/Lyft is a problem for a lot of people. I’ve ran into issues like going to events (concerts/sporting events) where they expect you to download their app to even get in the door, which is more of a societal problem then a technical one for me. I know some apps can be emulated on Linux phones but I havent played with it much so I’m not sure how well they work.

I’ve used gnome maps with very degrees of success. Its obviously not on the level of google maps, but getting better.

Junkdata ,

Uber and lyft do have web versions you can use to use the service, however app notification services and more detail stuff on the driver are not available like it is on the app versions.

For lyft: ride.lyft.com

For uber: www.uber.com/us/en/ride/

As far as maps, i used this when i had ubuntu phone, it was pure maps running offline with osm scout server. I had to go on a browser to get the coordinates of where i wanted to go and input that on the puremaps. Its an extra step but once i saved the default locations it made it easier use.

CaptainHowdy ,

Oh wow I did not know they had web versions! That is awesome! I might get a linux phone now and give this a shot.

Gecko ,

How was your experience with Mobian? I had my install break like 3 different times with barely any usage / installing packages.

js10 ,

I’ve had a great experience with Mobian. It’s been a while since I distro-hopped for mobile OS’s but Mobian seems to be the most stable for me.

RoboRay , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?
@RoboRay@kbin.social avatar

Fedora is my daily driver.

I install Ubuntu LTS for family/friends, as the more stable software makes supporting them easier, and they should have a few years of no major problems if I get hit by a truck.

Name-Not-Applicable , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?
@Name-Not-Applicable@kbin.social avatar

In general, Ubuntu is my go-to when I just want something that works and is reasonably stable. Just pick the spin with the Desktop Environment that you like. I'm using KDE Neon (I realize Neon isn't an Ubuntu flavor or spin) on my daily driver laptop, and Ubuntu MATE on my desktop. I also have an old netbook that usually gets Xubuntu, but currently has Fedora 37 XFCE as an experiment.

It sure is nice that we have to option to distro-hop, either on bare metal or in a VM.

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

Arch for desktop, Debian for server

SamsonSeinfelder ,

Intimidated by Arch? Try Manjaro. It’s Arch based. I have it running as my Desktop (x86) and on my RPi (Arm)

wanghis_khan ,

My two cents: Manjaro kinda sucks nowdays and ought to be skipped. Good amount of Arch alternatives.

marlowe221 ,

Like EndeavourOS!

sentient_loom ,
@sentient_loom@sh.itjust.works avatar

I’m using endeavouros and it’s really amazing.

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