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linux

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gfom , in Does anyone actually use Enlightenment?
@gfom@lemmy.world avatar

I think Budgie plans to move from GTK to ELF.

ike ,

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.

Raphael , in Anybody have a solution for dotfiles outside /home
@Raphael@lemmy.world avatar

but maybe somebody knows a clever way to handle this?

backups

Secret300 , in Was Fedora always so unstable?

I’ve been using fedora since 32 and I’d say this is a bad phase. I have heard time and time again that opensuse is more stable tho

xohshoo , in Does anyone actually use Enlightenment?

Bodhi linux users do. Their Moksha desktop is based on Enlightenment, and the pace of development, while not speedy, is ongoing

eyolf OP ,

‘not speedy, but ongoing’ - That sounds like E, alright …

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

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.

ImpossibleRubiksCube , in Anyone else starting to favor Flatpak over native packages?

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.

DidacticDumbass OP ,

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.

neuromante , in Does anyone actually use Enlightenment?

I share the same experience. I remember back in the 00’s when it had the same allure but tbh nothing has changed that much.

mrh , in Void Linux

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.

piranhaphish , in Does anyone actually use Enlightenment?

I did daily drive it for a couple of years sometime around then.

It was so beautiful, yet still performant on basic hardware because it was written relatively low-level iirc. It was like having the flashy UI that they used in movies (anybody remember the 3D filesystem browsers?), but for real and actually usable. And the aesthetics were in contrast to the other major DE of the time which were all kind of drab tbh.

But that was the main use case imo: nice UI for low-end hardware. Once other DE started looking nicer, partly due to leveraging GPUs, the niche nature of Enlightenment became more of a hindrance.

I haven’t looked at it in quite a while and don’t know what their current philosophy or design is but, if it’s still the same, I think it might still be an interesting alternative to XFCE or LXDE for somebody with older hardware that wants to experience a unique UI from a passionate team.

ccunix ,

That 3D file system browser (I presume you’re talking about Jurassic Park) was totally real.

It was a tech demo that SGI included with IRIX called “fsn”. Ironically, at the time, many people criticised it for being unrealistic. There is an open source clone called “fsv”.

Bishma , in Does anyone actually use Enlightenment?
@Bishma@social.fossware.space avatar

I had completely forgotten about it and would have assumed it was a thing of the past.

Raphael , in Distro hoppers, how do you manage your config files?
@Raphael@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t stow or anything difficult anymore, it complicates things.

I just save everything in my gitlab account and then I manually create the links.

EpicGamer , in Which distro has the best GUI in your opinion?

I run tiny core linux for the UI personally

Syudagye , in Distro hoppers, how do you manage your config files?
@Syudagye@pawb.social avatar

not distro-hopping, but i use nix, which can be used on anydistro.

Elw , in Anybody have a solution for dotfiles outside /home

There should be no dotfiles outside of home directories so I assume you mean a config file. In those cases, git and symlinks are a great option. Make a config directory in your home dir and organize it however you want. Include config files for the tools you’re interested in, commit them to git for backups and then symlink/hardlink the file to the expected path for the application.

Elw , in Canonical: Will fundamentally improve the documentation of Ubuntu and other software products

I’m glad to hear that they are planning to put more effort in to their documentation. The Arch Linux wiki is highly technically detailed, which is great, but can often be very intimidating to new users. I hope Canonical focuses on filling this documentation gap to better serve the new user to Linux.

SuperFola ,
@SuperFola@programming.dev avatar

It’s a post from 2 years ago, so if nothing changed as of today, well, I think they didn’t succeed in updating the docs

skates ,

I’ve read little to no ubuntu documentation (aside from stuff like installation and very basic troubleshooting). Have you noticed any improvement to it? I think this post is 2 years old so I’d assume there’d be at least a bit of little change.

PoisonedPrisonPanda ,

this post is 2 years old so I’d assume there’d be at least a bit of little change.

wow thanks for pointing that out.

christophski ,

I think the lemmy “Hot” algorithm is still broken. If you scroll much it’ll start showing old posts

PoisonedPrisonPanda ,

yeah. the thing is I know that and I usually sort for new anyway.

however if not, 2h vs 2y is still a welcome pitfall.

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