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geophysicist, in Fedora, Arch, or EndeavourOS?

Controversial opinion: unless your university studies and work is in OS development, then you should go for Windows or Mac. You won’t have energy or time to keep fixing your laptop OS when an update breaks the Bluetooth driver or whatever when you have a class to attend and assignments to do

Shamot,
@Shamot@jlai.lu avatar

A better advice would be: Don’t install updates when you have a class to attend and assignments to do. There is always a risk of breaking something on any OS.

Stanley_Pain,
@Stanley_Pain@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

This is the right answer.

What are you studying OP?

My opinion has been to install PopOS on all my laptops. It’s consistently needed the least amount of fixing to get things like fan curves, or keyboard backlights, etc working

Arch in desktop.

lemmyvore,

While not choosing a bleeding edge distro is a good idea, there are plenty of stable Linux distros to choose from. And it’s not like Windows is a paragon of stability either. And buying a Mac is a whole other story.

astronaut_sloth,

I agree with this in general, but you still may want to consider using Windows or Mac if there’s university only software that is Windows/Mac-based and doesn’t play nicely with VMs, which is really common in test-taking software (since it’s essentially spyware). An alternative would be dual-booting if you want to deal with that.

The reason I say this is that when I went back to school and started course work, there was an online class that mandated the use of certain test-taking software. I tried to get it to work in a VM (by masking the clues of being in a VM), and it kept shutting me down. I ultimately had to borrow a friend’s laptop to take all of my quizzes and tests, which was a real pain. Thankfully, I only had that one class like that, but any others would have driven me to get a cheap throw-away Windows-only box.

In the end, I’d stay away from bleeding-edge for school work, so Fedora is probably your better bet, but there may come a time that you will need to use Windows (much to your chagrin).

morbidcactus, (edited )

I’ve literally never had issues like this with Linux updates, tbf I use Debian and Debian derivatives so maybe that’s why (Debian on my laptop, Ubuntu server on my nas/server, Debian and Mint for my 3d printers). On the other hand I’ve had horrible experience with Bluetooth in windows for audio, some devices losing audio mid meeting but remaining connected for examole.

rufus, (edited )

Yeah, I had sound and printing break on Windows, too. And my mom’s Windows PC breaks every year and a half. I’d say go for linux if you’re comfortable with that, it’s pretty robust. Or MacOS that also seems not to break.

(Of course something like Arch or EndeavourOS is more complicated and may break. Fedora, Debian, Mint … will be a better choice for stability. My Debian install runs without mayor issues for 5 years now. If you don’t do silly stuff an mess with the system, they’ll outperform windows.)

Most people choose an OS because they’re used to that specific workflow and know the quirks and how to get around. That’s why many peoole use Microsoft, not because it’s better. School/College/University is a good time to try something. After that you’re pretty much stuck.

TooLazyDidntName, in Fedora, Arch, or EndeavourOS?

Ive never used arch for more than a week, I was an ubuntu user for the longest time before switching to fedora a few months ago. Ive never been happier with an OS. I’m using the KDE spin

jonne, in Rust-Written Linux Scheduler Showing Promising Results For Gaming Performance

If this is in user space, does this mean we can switch schedulers on the fly? Put it in game mode when gaming, power saving mode when on battery, etc?

simple, in Rust-Written Linux Scheduler Showing Promising Results For Gaming Performance

Wow, that’s a huge difference. I wonder if it’s just a niche case that fixes Terraria specifically, it would be nice to see more benchmarks on other games.

BlanK0, (edited ) in X11 tiling WMs

Some of the X11 WMs are dwm, awesome, qtile, bspwm, etc.

Gonna leave here a link of a list of X11 WMs if you are interested.

Like some have said on this thread, there isn’t really a better wm, it all comes down to your own needs.

danielfgom, in Desktop icons not loading
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Backup and do a fresh install

danielfgom, in Gnome completely different and buggy after update (Debian)
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Backup your data. Download the correct Debian and burn to usb. Do a fresh install. Make sure to format the disk first.

Unless you’re dual booting in which case only format the Linux partition

devfuuu, in On the Road to Plasma 6, Vol. 5 – Kai Uwe's Blog

Scaling fixes really warmy heart.

kzhe, in [Resolved - now using Onboard] Any recommendations for an on-screen keyboard like the one that Windows has. The one that comes with Gnome is annoying to use...
mmababes,

Looks good but I’m using X11

Sarcasmo220, in Yubikey on Linux?

usually when I have problems with YubiKey being detected it is because the pcscd service has not been started, or I forgot to enable it so it would start automatically on boot.

You can follow the instructions here on how to do so: linuxhandbook.com/systemd-start-service-boot/

vhstape,
@vhstape@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Unfortunately, pcscd is running… At this point I am thinking it is a hardware issue with my setup

southsamurai, in Display blacks out while opening and closing applications on Wayland KDE.
@southsamurai@sh.itjust.works avatar

Since you got the answer already, I’m no longer unwilling to ask where the hell that wallpaper came from.

Gotta hook me up!

Namstel,
southsamurai,
@southsamurai@sh.itjust.works avatar

Much appreciated!

orac, in [SOLVED] How to customize dead keys under Wayland / Electron apps?

Not an answer to you actual question, but: I stopped using dead keys long ago because I found it irritating to have to hit space whenever I needed to break out. Instead I mapped my CapsLock to be a Compose-key which lets me make almost any symbol I ever need in a very intuitive wsy. It works everywhere (incl. Wayland).

pathief, (edited )
@pathief@lemmy.world avatar

I rarely had to hit space, honestly. My keyboard doesn’t have a key specifically for caps lock, a control key is there instead. I quite like it.

I’ve been trying to make a switch for the compose key but it’s hard to kick decades-old muscle memory heh

bazsy, in Edit: Flatpak (possibly regression) issue caused by either xdg-desktop-portal-gtk and/or xdg-desktop-portal-gnome

What filesystem are you using? Is it encrypted?

Could you run a benchmark to verify if reads and writes are both affected? KDiskMark is like crystaldiskmark or Gnome Disks has a built in benchmark.

jackpot,
@jackpot@lemmy.ml avatar

not encyrpted. i tried running a write test in gnome disks but i get 'error unmounting /dev/nvme0n1p2: target is busy (udisks-error-quark, 14)

excitingburp, in Desktop icons not loading

Try running your file manager or something else that displays icons from the terminal, it may log error messages.

2xsaiko, (edited ) in I'm an idiot (arm)
@2xsaiko@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

the answer for “what can unpack this archive” is pretty much always: bsdtar from libarchive

edit: sorry, I can’t read. libarchive unfortunately can’t write RAR archives.

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