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linux

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Taleya , in People doing the 30 days linux Challenge are having several problems because of Mint's old packages and technology. Why people still recommend it when there is Fedora and Opensuse with KDE and Gnome?

Because you’re dealing with lifelong windows users who want a reassuringly familiar looking OS not fucking linux techs

Jesus christ learn to tailor to the user

ReveredOxygen ,
@ReveredOxygen@sh.itjust.works avatar

Fedora does have a Cinnamon spin. The advantage of Mint is that all the Ubuntu tutorials work on it

Edit: plus Fedora’s philosophy about non-free software makes it less than ideal for people who don’t care

holgersson ,

Even if Fedora has a spin with the same DE, from my experience, Mint/Ubuntu still has a higher chance just work on a given system.

I love Fedora and use it pretty much exclusively, but the out of the box experience of Mint and Ubuntu is still a bit better for the average user imho.

pastermil , in Having a bunch of beers rn & trying out Debian for the first time. Will I have regrets? 🤔 happy Saturday to all, drink something delicious today 🍻

What machine do you have for this?

ProgrammingSocks , in GNOME June 2024: C'mon you can do better

Who gives a shit. Use the desktop you like. Don’t post this /g/ tier bait.

t0mri , in Finally coming around to using Linux. How's it on a tablet?

You use fedora lemmy.world/post/16899331

Cwilliams , in GNOME 47 Can Now Be Built With X11 Support Disabled

Woohoo! One step closer to killing the tyranny of X11! He’s almost dead already, just those pesky Nvidia users… (Or rather that pesky graphics card company)

boringbisexual ,

The newest nvidia driver took care of the one issue I had with a specific game so I’m all Wayland now

ssm , in how easy is it to install arch?
@ssm@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

It’s as easy as following any set of instructions. Whether or not you actually understand what the instructions are doing is an entirely different story. If you actually want to learn how to operate a posix system, doing a bunch of command line installs of Linux isn’t going to help you with that. What will help is living in something with excellent documentation like OpenBSD, with minimal reliance on external tooling. Once you have the skills, they’ll transfer anywhere.

funkless_eck , in Having a bunch of beers rn & trying out Debian for the first time. Will I have regrets? 🤔 happy Saturday to all, drink something delicious today 🍻

I am commenting this from a terrible strip club with friends who dragged me here. I wish I was in your position.

gaylord_fartmaster , in how easy is it to install arch?

I had done a few easier Linux installs on Raspberry Pis and VMs in the past, but when I decided I wanted to try using Linux as my daily driver on my desktop (dual-booted with Windows at the time) I decided to go with a manual Arch install using a guide and I would 100% recommend it if you’re trying to pick up Linux knowledge. It’s really not a difficult process to just follow step-by-step, but I looked up each command as they came up in the guide so I could try to understand what I was doing and why.

I don’t know what packages archinstall includes because I’ve never used it, but really the biggest thing for me learning was booting into a barebones Arch install. Looking into the different options for components and getting everything I needed setup and configured how I wanted was invaluable.

That being said, now that I know how, is that how I would choose to install it? Nah, I use the CachyOS installer now, but if I wanted stock Arch I’d probably use archinstall.

0x2d , in how easy is it to install arch?

i can do it on about 15 minutes without the wiki for a fairly basic install

and then about 30 minutes to set up sway how i want, install common software i like, etc

but for a more complex setup it will take longer and i will need to check the wiki

melroy ,
@melroy@kbin.melroy.org avatar

I can do it with my eyes closed. And using the number shortcuts to navigate through the menus.

berryjam , in how easy is it to install arch?

The wiki holds your hand through it so it’s pretty easy.

scroll_responsibly , in Having a bunch of beers rn & trying out Debian for the first time. Will I have regrets? 🤔 happy Saturday to all, drink something delicious today 🍻
@scroll_responsibly@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

🫡

sandalbucket , in how easy is it to install arch?

There is no such thing as easy or hard.

Give it a try, fuck it up, and give it a try again. Try not to fuck it up in the same way as the first time. Repeat until it works - it will work eventually.

It took me about 6 hours and 3 disk re-formats my first time. I was particularly bad at it. I barely knew what a disk was, nevermind a partition.

Actually I’m still not sure what a partition is.

You’ll do fine :)

Cyber ,

Yep, completely agree. We only (really) learn when we make mistakes.

I usually aim to do my “first” (of whatever) as best I can, but totally prepared to wipe & restart…

ryannathans , in [Manjaro XFCE] How do you connect an Xbox 360 controller wirelessly?

If it’s the same as xbox series x, install the xpadneo driver

SpiceDealer OP ,
@SpiceDealer@lemmy.world avatar

Do I have to use PC receiver or is that unnecessary?

ryannathans ,

Ax200 wifi/bluetooth onboard receiver works for my series x controller

lemmyvore ,

It’s not. Series X and series S use native Bluetooth and work with xpadneo. Older controllers use their own proprietary receiver that needs to be plugged into the machine and work with regular xpad.

pastermil , in People doing the 30 days linux Challenge are having several problems because of Mint's old packages and technology. Why people still recommend it when there is Fedora and Opensuse with KDE and Gnome?

Because for most use cases, Mint works flawlessly. It changes little from time to time. It has all the drivers to get started with a wide range of common hardware. It has all the codecs to play common media formats.

Of course if the package update is too slow, it’s not for you, but then unlike you, most people don’t need the latest and greatest. They just need something that works from the get-go with predictable behavior.

trolololol ,

The software I use doesn’t get significant updates often. Kennel, vi, grep, find? They’ve been around for decades.

I’m genuinely curious what kind of things people can’t do because of lag on package updates.

pastermil ,

It usually has something to do with programming. Again, most cases, the versions in the packages included in your garden variety stable distros should cover most use cases.

However, once in a while one would encounter the need of using the cutting edge features on certain compiler or interpreter. Rust comes to mind. I know Python introduced some features that could drastically alter workflow (e.g. switch statement). NodeJS is another one known to be lagging behind from time to time.

In other cases, hardware support might be taken to consideration, especially for newer machines. However, with Mint including the optional newer kernel, it shouldn’t be a problem.

Benaaasaaas ,

Hmm vim is the reason I dropped all debian based distros. Cause I wanted v8 when it was released but sorry you have to wait 2-4 years. Wasn’t in the mood for compiling it myself so just went with arch based distro and haven’t looked back since.

neidu2 ,

The only major issue I ever had with mint running relatively old packages was when I got my current laptop. Nvidia 4060 required a really new nvidia driver, which in turn required a really new kernel. I sorted it out by adding a few unofficial repos, and it worked like a charm afterwards.

Whenever old versions are giving you grief, they can usually be sorted out in a similar manner.

Cornelius ,

Modem hardware.

The default kernel Mint has installed isn’t new enough to support cards like the 7900 XT. Though this can be fixed by updating the kernel using Mint’s kernel version utility

CaptDust , (edited ) in [Manjaro XFCE] How do you connect an Xbox 360 controller wirelessly?

Arch wiki says

Both the wired and wireless (with the Xbox 360 Wireless Receiver for Windows) controllers are supported by the xpad kernel module and should work without additional packages.

I guess my question is, have you tried plugging in the receiver? You’ll need the receiver for it to work, they are 2.4Ghz not BT

SpiceDealer OP ,
@SpiceDealer@lemmy.world avatar

Didn’t know if it was supported but this clears it up. Thanks.

CaptDust ,

I read too fast you said found the receiver, haha. Yep, supported! Hopefully plug and play 🤞

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