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entropicdrift, (edited ) in Need Some Total Noob Advice for Installing and Running Linux
@entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Since you’re interested in KDE, why not try Fedora Kinoite?

It’s an immutable distribution in much the same was as Steam OS 3. For individual pieces of software, you just install Flatpak versions. It’s deeply convenient if you don’t want to perform maintenance on your PC and want it to “just work”.

If that’s not noob friendly, what is?

kurisu,
@kurisu@awful.systems avatar

If you want immutability, Vanilla is the only good option right now. Services can be a nightmare on Fedora’s immutable systems, and some applications (qbittorrent, in my experience, though I haven’t seen anyone else have issues with it specifically) sometimes just outright decide to off themselves. I wouldn’t say it’s a bad distro, but recommending it to someone who states they don’t know much about computers could cause them trouble in the long run.

Scrath, (edited ) in Wayland-Proxy Load Balancer Helping Firefox Cope With Wayland Issues

Personally I didn’t have any problems with that yet fortunately.

My bigger problem right now is a bug that prevents me from copying stuff from the url bar when middle-click pasting is disabled in the KDE settings…

In X11 the bug doesn’t exist

Exec,
@Exec@pawb.social avatar

My bigger problem right now is a bug that prevents me from copying stuff from the url bar when middle-click pasting is enabled in the KDE settings…

What. For me it’s the opposite - I can’t copy stuff to other apps from Firefox if that setting is not enabled

Scrath,

Yeah sorry. I was half asleep while I wrote this. That is the problem I have as well.

One workaround I found is to use the separate search bar (if you have it enabled) as a buffer.

When I copy the URL I can paste it into the search bar but nowhere else. If I copy the search bar I can paste it everywhere just fine

Exec,
@Exec@pawb.social avatar

Ah. For me it’s not the search bar only but also if I select text and press Ctrl+C/press context menu Copy as well.
Interestingly, if sites put something in the clipboard (eg. Mastodon toot Copy link button) it works anywhere else.

1984,
@1984@lemmy.today avatar

Is this on Fedora? My girlfriend has lots of similar issues on Fedora that disappeared on pop os.

Scrath,

EndeavorOS with KDE Plasma desktop

nyakojiru, in Ending support for Windows 10 could send 240 million computers to the landfill. Why not install Linux on them?
@nyakojiru@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

So you pretend that what was running on windows to run in Linux?. Dafuq people are naive af. We are talking mostly enterprise machines, most corporations didnt migrate to windows 11. So its not just installing steam lol

bartolomeo,
@bartolomeo@suppo.fi avatar

No, those computers can go to underprivileged communities so ppl can have access to word processor, programming, web dev, etc. They would be running Linux and be secure and functional.

joenforcer,

Again, naive. People in underprivileged communities would struggle to even turn a computer on properly. Using Linux? Nice ideal, but not gonna happen.

bartolomeo,
@bartolomeo@suppo.fi avatar

People in underprivileged communities would struggle to even turn a computer on properly.

Christ are you fucking serious? That’s the most privileged, classist, ignorant comment I’ve seen in a while.

pastermil,

A lot of the corporate software these days run on cloud or provide viable Linux support. We’re hoping that at least this can be covered.

joenforcer,

The post title is editorialized. The actual article had nothing to do with Linux.

UprisingVoltage, in dlss3 to fsr3 mod became available

I can’t quite understand what it is. If it allows you to run FSR3 instead of DLSS in games where the latter is supported but the first is not… Would be pretty huge

NekkoDroid,
@NekkoDroid@programming.dev avatar

To my understanding, it is exactly that. It allows upscaling(/framegen?) with cards that don’t support DLSS, in games that only have DLSS

lockhart,

It’s for using DLSS with FSR3’s frame generation. Good if you don’t have a 4xxx series card

semperverus,
@semperverus@lemmy.world avatar

Does it also work on radeon?

semperverus,
@semperverus@lemmy.world avatar

Does it also work on radeon?

lockhart,

Apparently it requires an nvidia GPU

www.nexusmods.com/site/mods/738?tab=description

semperverus,
@semperverus@lemmy.world avatar

Does it also work on radeon?

redcalcium,

An Nvidia RTX graphics card is required to use this mod.

cupcakezealot, in Ending support for Windows 10 could send 240 million computers to the landfill. Why not install Linux on them?
@cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Microsoft: Arbitrarily increases the system requirements for Windows 11 even though it runs perfectly fine on older pcs just to get people to buy new computers

Also Microsoft: Why’s there so much waste??

knfrmity,

As I understand it, it wasn’t arbitrary. Microsoft has wanted to require TPMs for two decades at this point. Once there’s high enough adoption they can roll out their version of trusted computing.

Allero,

TPM modules are not new, it’s TPM 2.0 that got problematic.

If you run Windows 10, chances are you have TPM 1.4, which is perfectly fine, but Microsoft wants moar

TrickDacy,
@TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

When has MS indicated they care about waste in the least?

blazeknave,
TrickDacy,
@TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

This is a marketing page that any big company has a version of. I meant by action, not lip service

blazeknave,

There is a link immediately over the headline in the url I shared. Read the report. I used to sell green asset disposition of electronics. It’s been an industry for a long time. It makes a difference. See what you want to see man. I can intro you to people in that business if you’d like to pick their brains. I don’t know who owns this at Microsoft but I can ask contacts there, if you’d like me to help get you an intro.

Liz,

I found it absolutely amazing they claim my pretty decent laptop from 2016 can’t run Windows 11. Laptops haven’t gotten that much better since then. Also, supposing it actually couldn’t, it’s a fucking operating system. It should be doing everything it can to stay out of the way. What kind of bloated monstrosity is Windows 11 that my laptop can’t run it?

applebusch,

It’s the trusted platform module which I know almost nothing about but I’m sure is fucking stupid. My monster of a desktop from 2018 also can’t run win11, and the only reason is my cpu is missing the tpm that it requires.

GenderNeutralBro, in The CEO of PROTON answers YOUR questions! Drive, Linux support, Photos, features, and a lot more!

Any mirrors? Tilvids.com seems to be down.

isVeryLoud,

YouTube seems up

/s

Azarova,
@Azarova@hexbear.net avatar
tho, in Best distro for Hyprland?
@tho@lemmy.ml avatar

are there any reasons to prefer hyprland over sway, that are not bells and whistles?

theshatterstone54,

One word: tiling. And no, the autotiling script just doesn’t cut it. If I’m clicking something on Vivaldi on the left hand side, and I have a terminal on the right, but I also need thunar, my file manager, I would like it to open at the bottom of the stack, under the terminal, not under Vivaldi, where my mouse and focus are.

SquigglyEmpire, in I need some help with linux energy management and hibernation

Which model do you have? There’s a known issue affecting the sleep/hibernate for the chipset on the new AMD model on the, I believe AMD has already submitted patches to fix it in the next kernel release though.

WbrJr,

I have the first European batch

SquigglyEmpire,

Hopefully this will make it in as an update for currently supported kernels, but if not it should be in the upcoming 6.8 release:

www.phoronix.com/…/Framework-13-AMD-Lid-Suspend

Da_Boom, in Ending support for Windows 10 could send 240 million computers to the landfill. Why not install Linux on them?
@Da_Boom@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

Because the vast majority of people don’t have a reason to do it. They’ve never used Linux before - heck there are people who have never heard of it before.

The other thing is you and I, chances are can find a use for our old machines, have a place to store it, or know how valuable it currently is. Most other people aren’t aware of how parts or entire systems depreciates, don’t have a use for a second computer, and can’t afford the storage space to store a spare PC for a backup. They also don’t really have time to do a lot of research on the issue or just plain old don’t care.

So what do they do? Well there only remaining option is to throw it away, maybe theyll be a bit wise and take it to an electronics recycler, where you have to trust it won’t get thrown away anyway.

blazeknave,

Exactly. Used mine to learn Linux and proxmox. I’m also someone’s who would be here.

ULS, (edited )

They will be in the ditches alongside rural roads with the tires, couches, and washing machines.

Nature at work. In 1000 years the government will pay child slaves to mine them for the new microchip implants. Smoggy fields of children burning plastics off metal to feed the dreams of the rich and elite.

The same as it ever was, the same as it always will be.

…I don’t know why I wasted my time making this useless post. 😑

QuazarOmega, in Canonical changes the license of LXD to AGPL

Is this a based move? From Canonical? (°0°)

chameleon,
@chameleon@kbin.social avatar

No, it comes together with a CLA being required to contribute. In other words, Canonical (and only Canonical) is still allowed to sell exceptions to the AGPL.

Yes, the post says there is no copyright assignment. That's extremely carefully chosen wording to avoid mention of the CLA which was made required in the same commit as the license change. It's "just" a super extended license that lets them do whatever, not assignment.

fossphi,

Quite the same case as with matrix. I very much prefer AGPL over all the other permissive licences, but I don’t know, the CLA leaves a bad taste in the mouth

Goun,

Can somebody explain in a few words what’s CLA? Does it limit contributors rights?

ikidd,
@ikidd@lemmy.world avatar

You sign over your copyright on your contributions to the project.

Goun,

Shit that’s awful, so they could theorically change the lisence to whatever they want at any time

QuazarOmega,

I tried reading through it and I don’t understand completely if they reserve the right to relicense in a way that is against the interest of contributor.
They say that the contributor retains the copyright and can do whatever they want with the code they contributed, which is good, they also say that they can sublicense your contributions, which, as far as I know, means they couldn’t make it more permissive, but only more restrictive, at least that is the case with Creative Commons

LoveSausage, in Fedora Asahi Remix Officially Released for Apple Silicon Macs

Most are talking about the laptops. I have my eyes on a Mac mini to run asahi on. The biggest downsides with Mac hardware is reperability and upgrades. Some issues the Mac mini doesn’t have Vs laptops is ofc is no battery replacement , screen and keyboard webcam, mouse to use. and there are hubs for installing more storage. Ram is ofc a big minus. Looking at m2 16 GB 512 mb. And extend storage with something like this macworld.com/…/mac-mini-upgrade-hub-storage-ether… 40 Gbs thunderbolt would make it easy to extend storage at least.

As long as it doesn’t break I would take this over any alternative minipc . I use my ThinkPad today but 99% of use is at home anyway so no need for portability. Need to wait some time to get the extra funds for it but something like that…

d3Xt3r,

As long as it doesn’t break I would take this over any alternative minipc

May I ask why though? One of the biggest advantages of using a MacBook is the performance-battery efficiency. If you’re going to get a Mac mini and loading Linux, you lose that advantage.

Unless you’re looking specifically for an ARM64 machine for whatever reason, I think an AMD mini PC, say something like the Minisforum EliteMini UM780 XTX would be technically a better option - you get dual NVMe, dual 2.5G network ports, USB 4.0, Oculink for even more b/w than Thunderbolt, and far more I/O options in general. Not to mention, excellent Linux support.

LoveSausage,

I will have to look into it , but all reviews/comparisons I have seen has been always that the Mac beats the others. I do not game , I want audio and some video editing besides code.

Power consumption is a point as well as I am planning on going off the powergrid eventually.

jackpot, in Acer Aspire 1 ARM Laptop Has Nearly Complete Upstream Linux Support
@jackpot@lemmy.ml avatar

4gb ram is unusable, can you add ram to it?

Secret300,

zsawp or zram will be your friend on a device like this

Flaky, (edited ) in QEMU 8.2 Released With New VirtIO-Sound & VirtIO-GPU "Rutabaga" Devices
@Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

Hopefully some of this comes to Windows guests. One of the major issues right now is that Windows virtualisation isn’t great. VirtualBox has GPU problems, VMware requires a lot of messing about with kernel modules if you don’t use Ubuntu, if KVM/QEMU is able to make a smooth environment for Windows guests that’d help bring people in who still need Windows for the odd bit of software or two.

I remember there was a GPU driver for Windows but that seems to have stalled?

Edit: Cleared up why I think VMware is a bit of a mess.

UnityDevice, (edited )

If you need this frequently, I really suggest you look into GPU forwarding. I have a Windows VM setup with a second card and it works perfectly, I use it for games and CAD all the time. Figure out your iommu groups, pop a second card in your computer (and optionally a second nvme drive if you want max performance), and use virt-manager and the arch wiki to set it up.

For accessing the machine you can use a second monitor input, or you can get a window to the machine with looking glass or moonlight. I use moonlight as it lets me play games from my laptop on the couch, and looking glass was causing windows to crash sometimes.

It’s a bit of work to set it all up but when you’re done it should just be one XML file and maybe one modprobe.d config file.

I think I’ve been using this for over a year now and the single pain point I encountered in all that time was maybe that usb input hotplug isn’t supported, though there’s ways to fix that, but I haven’t bothered.

netburnr,
@netburnr@lemmy.world avatar

Vmware requires a lot of messing around.

What are you going on about? VMware and Windows work just fine if you install vmware tools.

Flaky, (edited )
@Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

I’m talking about the installation process for VMware itself.

I had to help someone non-techy install VMware on Pop!_OS (the OS preinstalled by System76 on their hardware), and it required messing with the kernel modules which fails on Pop!_OS. It seems like VMware builds for a very specific version of Ubuntu which of course, means the kernel module building process fails when you use a kernel version that’s different to what Ubuntu has (which Pop!_OS does and maybe some other Ubuntu-based distros). Thankfully someone on GitHub maintains up-to-date patches for the VMware modules so I was able to guide him through there but this isn’t something someone new to Linux would want to do.

It’s not like simply installing it from a package manager, well unless you use Arch but I’m not putting this person who’s new to Linux on Arch when he just started using CLI.

drwankingstein, (edited )

virtio-sound likely will eventually and ufs probably will too. the gpu driver is being worked on by a third party, but it’s still using virgl so I doubt it will be very preformant

avidamoeba, (edited ) in Flatpack, appimage, snaps..
@avidamoeba@lemmy.ca avatar

Software deployment that tackles dependency hell in a secure fashion while providing repeatable, atomic updates and rollback.

AppImage doesn’t even provide a proper update system.

MonkderZweite,

There’s software for that. Honestly, i prefer that over the ‘whole package or nothing’ approach in Flatpack, which still has ~/.var for packages hardcoded btw.

rutrum,
@rutrum@lm.paradisus.day avatar

Can you elaborate on update system? AppImage is just a format, right? Whereas flatpak is a format and an entire toolkit for downloading and running flatpaks.

avidamoeba, (edited )
@avidamoeba@lemmy.ca avatar

You already said it. Flatpak and Snap both include an entire system around updates and rollback which provide some pretty strong guarantees for update success. AppImage does not. It’s got some libs available that an individual developer could use to implement their own update mechanism but isn’t a built-in. And besides, without a system-level component that manages install/update/rollback, you can’t have any guarantees about the update process. You’re back to the Windows-world per-app update.exe paradigm (or update.sh in Linux).

Sarcasmo220, in Ending support for Windows 10 could send 240 million computers to the landfill. Why not install Linux on them?

What if, sometime after Win 10 loses support a virus takes advantage of the lack of patches and propagates across all the machines with a simple message “This operating system is no longer supported, please click here to upgrade.” The button then runs a script to download and install a user friendly Linux distro. The world is then saved.

bartolomeo,
@bartolomeo@suppo.fi avatar

Chaotic good

herrvogel,

Make it install temple OS, so that it can save not only the planet but also our souls. Amen. 🙏🙏🙏🙏

mwalimu,
@mwalimu@baraza.africa avatar

My kind of hopes.

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