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.

HumanBehaviorByBjork , in What's your favorite terminal?
@HumanBehaviorByBjork@hexbear.net avatar

i quite like kitty, it’s got great text rendering support

potentiallynotfelix OP , in Wine error when running Magellan VantagePoint
@potentiallynotfelix@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

PARTIAL SOLUTIONI read on the WineHQ page that you need directx 2.0 installed, I had the newest directx. This allows the software to start, but theres still some error. I’ll troubleshoot and post again if I can’t find anything.

flashgnash , in What does your desktop look like?

At this point why not use Pantheon instead of GNOME?

scratchandgame , in Firefox looks so much better than Chrome

They both use hundreds megabytes of RAM just to render my static page. But for hydrogen web chromium use ~35M. This is shitty.

(w3m use 10M and in most case for searching we only need text-based browser)

liforra , in *Permanently Deleted*
@liforra@endlesstalk.org avatar

Permanently Deleted

ani OP ,

Permanently Deleted

Archaeopteryx , in Opensuse kde plasma 6 upgrade
@Archaeopteryx@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Did the upgrade a few minutes ago. No problems so far and everything feels very smooth when it comes to animation, desktop effects etc.

intelisense , in Opensuse kde plasma 6 upgrade

Upgraded this morning. Everything seems mostly OK, but the login screen theme is odd, but fully functional. The lock screen is the same as before, though.

wanghis_khan , in What's your favorite terminal?

terminator was my go to for the longest time. Nowadays, I just use default GNOME Terminal. I just need things to work and not waste time tinkering.

gnuplusmatt , in VLC Media Player Plans to Add Online Media Streaming

So is this like adding mediastream adaptive like what other players have to load google’s widevine module?

OsrsNeedsF2P ,

No

tla , in Planning on moving over from Windows 10 to Linux for my Personal Work Station. Can't decide which OS I should switch to.

“dnf -C …” may change your life!

dysprosium , in Finally switched to Wayland with KDE+NVIDIA

Same setup but with gnome. My video screen recorder broke: simplescreenrecorder for which I have not yet found a solution.

Also Mathpix anyone familiar? Just straigh out don’t work

GadgeteerZA , in Finally switched to Wayland with KDE+NVIDIA
@GadgeteerZA@fedia.io avatar

@Kajika thanks that sounds promising. I'd also seen some improvement but still got random freezes. Looking forward to the update. I have a similar setup with Manjaro KDE.

smb , in Planning on moving over from Windows 10 to Linux for my Personal Work Station. Can't decide which OS I should switch to.

sorry if i might repeat someones answer, i did not read everything.

it seems you want it for “work” that assumes that stability and maybe something like LTS is dort of the way to go. This also assumes older but stable packages. maybe better choose a distro that separates new features from bugfixes, this removes most of the hassle that comes with rolling release (like every single bugfix comes with two more new bugs, one removal/incompatible change of a feature that you relied on and at least one feature that cripples stability or performance whilst you cannot deactivate it… yet…)

likely there is at least some software you most likely want to update out of regular package repos, like i did for years with chromium, firefox and thunderbird using some shellscript that compared current version with latest remote to download and unpack it if needed.

however maybe some things NEED a newer system than you currently have, thus if you need such software, maybe consider to run something in VMs maybe using ssh and X11 forwarding (oh my, i still don’t use/need wayland *haha)

as for me, i like to have some things shared anyway like my emails on an IMAP store accessible from my mobile devices and some files synced across devices using nextcloud. maybe think outside the box from the beginning. no arch-like OS gives you the stability that the already years-long-hung things like debian redhat/centos offer, but be aware that some OSes might suddenly change to rolling release (like centos i believe) or include rolling-release software made by third parties without respecting their own rules about unstable/testing/stable branches and thus might cripple their stability by such decisions. better stay up to date if what you update to really is what you want.

but for stability (like at work) there is nothing more practical than ancient packages that still get security fixes.

roundabout the last 15 years or more i only reinstalled my workstation or laptop for:

  • hardware problems, mostly aged disk like ssd wearlevel down (while recovery from backup or direct syncing is not reinstalling right?)
  • OS becomes EOL. thats it.

if you choose to run servers and services like imap and/or nextcloud, there is some gain in quickly switching the workstation without having to clone/copy everything but only place some configs there and you’re done.

A multi-OS setup is more likely to cover “all” needs while tools like x2vnc exist and can be very handy then, i nearly forgot that i was working on two very different systems, when i had such a setup.

I would suggest to make recovery easy, maybe put everything on a raid1 and make sure you have on offsite and an offline backup with snapshots, so in case of something breaks you just need to replace hardware. thats the stability i want for the tools i work with at least.

if you want to use a rolling release OS for something work related i would suggest to make sure no one externally (their repo, package manager etc) could ever prevent you from reinstalling that exact version you had at that exact point in time (snapshots from repos install media etc). then put everything in something like ansible and try out that reapplying old snapshots is straight forward for you, then (and not earlier) i would suggest that those OSes are ok for something you consider to be as important as “work”. i tried arch linux at a time when they already stopped supporting the old installer while the “new” installer wasn’t yet ready at all for use, thus i never really got into longterm use of archlinux for something i rely on, bcause i could’nt even install the second machine with the then broken install procedure *haha

i believe one should consider to NOT tinker too much on the workstation. having to fix something you personally broke “before” beeing able to work on sth important is the opposite of awesome. better have a second machine instead, swappable harddrive or use VMs.

The exact OS is IMHO not important, i personally use devuan as it is not affected by some instability annoyances that are present in ubuntu and probably some more distros that use that same software. at work we monitor some of those bugs of that software. within ubuntu cause it creates extra hassle and we workaround those so its mostly just a buggy annoying thing visible in monitoring.

MonkderZweite , in COSMIC Store Prototype

Hmpf, “cosmic store” only shows clotes shops.

Adding “linux” helps tho.

mmstick OP ,
@mmstick@lemmy.world avatar

I’d search pop-os/cosmic-store. That is the GitHub namespace for it.

piefedderatedd , in Help deciding Os

My guess is that a 2015 Macbook Air is probably not going to run a MacOS version that is still supported by Apple. That would be yet another reason to simply install Linux. Before you do so you can go for https://rescuezilla.com/ and do disk cloning to an image that you save to some storage like a USB disk. If you do the same after your installing and tweaked Linux installation, you can have the best of both worlds whenever you need it.

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