The idea is that it’s very hard to break the system, because apps are containerized, so they don’t ‘touch’ the system, and updates take effect only on reboots.
If update is broken, it won’t apply. And you can always rollback to previous state, if you don’t like something.
You don’t need to install stuff from the terminal, and you can install them from a GUI ‘store’.
No. I only use Android as my PC via AR glasses. Is there even any antivirus software for Android? Probably, but I don't care I guess. Never had a problem.
Also on AMD APU hardware, I was a while on Kubuntu with 5.15 as 5.16 and 5.17 had pretty frequent regressions regarding s0ix, but it was fine afterwards. Until now, though 6.3.12 seems to be somewhat stable again
Wild theory, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they change to iced-rs when they realize they can’t do the work needed to get elf to do exactly what they want, and instead can ride off of system76’s insane development accomplishments in their new rust based ecosystem of desktop components.
Reasons it might happen: the blog post specifically mentioned wanting a new ui-toolkit that worked well with rust or go, but at that time s76 hasn’t announced or dived into developing iced-rs more. I think it even mentioned hoping that s76 would build an alternative.
I’m a programmer, but I’m more an animator, modeler, and musician. Because of that, I usually end up with either Mint (like on my desktop) or, if I need something really suave with multimedia, KUbuntu. KDE is an incredibly useful and friendly suite of software, and Plasma doesn’t just look good as a DE, it makes sense from a usability standpoint and isn’t trying to pretend that it’s running on a phone.
Unless it is running on a phone, but that’s another story.
I’ll say this. Last time I used Snap, it resulted in a seemingly unfixable GStreamer dependency issue which ultimately required a fresh(-ish) start with a LiveUSB to fix. I installed the package through Flatpak the second time around, and everything runs flawlessly.
Even ethical issues aside, I’ll take Flatpak over Snap any day.
I cannot count the number of times I installed seemingly well documented software only to have it kill my system. Snaps, the very thing that would prevent that kind of misery, has inexcusable behavior.
Yeah, Flatpaks are great. Although I will say I am pretty agnostic, I don’t need my computer to follow some kind of paradigm for anything other than the comfort of organization. In fact just now I installed software through a PPA, because that is the official way for my system at the moment. Not the greatest, I think I could have chosen a different way in a drop down menu, but it detected Ubuntu (Mint), so whatever.
Yep! I used it as a daily driver for ~a year, switched off to try something new, and have recently switched back indefinitely.
Only distro I’ve ever switched back to after leaving, and that’s because it’s where I plan to stay. It really lives in such a sweet spot of up to date, stable, and simple/hackable.
With a nice handbook, friendly community, runit, xbps-src, and multi lib/arch support, Void is truly great.
Some of the things that have already been mentioned are true also for me, especially around permissions and assumptions about my system’s setup. However what really did it for me was when Firefox stopped recognizing my keyboard after a snap refresh. It’s just as if no input device was there for FF anymore. I found reports of the issue, but no solution. In the end I installed from a DEB repository and went through the shenanigans to prevent snap from reinstalling it.
Is it more reliable now? I used it for a while then used new pipe but it always had problems loading content, and I’ve been meaning to go Foss with YouTube and buying a pixel and using graphine
Perhaps do you know where I could find a potential list of piped instances?. Also thanks for letting me know about libretube and stuff, I didn’t know there was different instances of piped
@GadgeteerZA Most every window manager is going to inherently have a way to set hotkeys/keybindings/shortcuts...whatever you wanna call em. But you're certainly on the right track using xdotool. I'm eager to hear how it goes!
@eshep Too right, I discovered that great trick to rename the Window was only working with the Brave browser windows. OBS Studio by default does not have that option. Also, my having num lock keys to work as mouse pointer movements was interfering with those shortcut keys. I could use wmctrl to rename a window title but it is only temporary. So still work in progress.
linux
Top
This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.