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drwankingstein, (edited ) in Flatpak can look daunting...

Flatlack is weird. Sometimes it’s really good, but then other times depending on what you install it really bloons up.

magikmw,

One gotcha is installing both as user and root, getting two sets of dependencies. I only found out after a year or so of consciously using flatpak.

I’m now taking care to make sure I only use flatpak as root. Maybe not the most secure.

Pantherina,

Those are unmaintained apps and you probably shouldnt use them. Poorly this is not as obvious and cant be enforced.

atlasraven31, in How many of you run a Linux phone (Pine64, Librem etc) as your daily driver?

Nope. I would like to but as long as android does an okay job I will stick with that.

Waluigis_Talking_Buttplug,

Yeah Linux phone is a pipedream as long as Android works well at all.

The fact that you can use Termux kind of makes Linux phones moot, especially since you need a very specific set of hardware

lemmy_user_838586, (edited )

Disclaimer: I’m an android user and would love to switch to a Linux phone.

Problem with android is updates being locked by carriers or Google themselves. To get updates after 2-3 years you basically have to buy a phone that has unlockable bootloader and supports LineageOS, AND you have to have the technical skills to Install and set up LineageOS, I do, but no one else I know does, they just happily buy a new phone because app X,Y,Z stopped working on their old phone, which is perfectly usable. And if you have a phone where bootloader is locked (I’m looking at you, Verizon, EVERY PHONE THEY SELL THEY LOCK), oops there’s an expensive paperweight, can never be running anything other than Android 8 or whatever it came with.

MigratingtoLemmy,

My problem is the lack of availability of custom ROMs on new devices like the newest OnePlus and ASUS. Not the fault of the maintainers but it is what it is. I don’t want to be locked to Pixel hardware because come what may I will never trust Google on a single thing

Waluigis_Talking_Buttplug,

Show me a linux phone that isn’t an expensive paperweight after 2 years.

MigratingtoLemmy,

What inconveniences have you faced from the software?

Copying my edit here: I am willing to watch content and use banking apps from the browser. Do you think it’ll be fit for me?

LinuxSBC, (edited ) in December Updates: The Spirit of COSMIC

I think their RSS feed has a placeholder title for this.

Chewy7324,

You mean asdf isn’t a good title? /s

laverabe, (edited ) in Linux in the corporate space

We use windows at my work (I’ve been using Linux for 2 decades on home computer). I’m trying to migrate our work CPUs to Linux but the biggest road block is my unfamiliarity with librecad, I’m used to autocad. I use cad command line a lot and it’s hard to live without auto suggest commands. Libre has the capability but it’s very rough and not mature.

d3Xt3r, (edited ) in What are you most excited when it comes to linux in 2024?

Plasma 6, but just as excited for kernel 6.7 featuring:

  • bcachefs
  • AMD Seamless Boot (for flicker-free streamlined booting)
  • Scheduler improvements for better responsiveness/performance
  • IO_uring FUTEX support for better performance
  • More FUTEX2 work for potentially better gaming performance
  • Better write performance for eMMC chips (great for many IoT boards)
  • TCP network performance improvements
  • DisplayPort Alt Mode 2.1 support over Type-C
acockworkorange,

What about bcachefs excites you? Like, what does it offer that ext4, Btrfs and zfs don’t?

d3Xt3r, (edited )

Initial benchmarks show better performance than btrfs (at least for some workloads), but more importanty, I like that it offers tiered/cache storage - so you can use a fast and small drive (NVMe) to speed up a slow and bigger drive (HDD). You can do that with ZFS as well of course, but it doesn’t have the massive RAM requirements. Also it’s much more easier to set up and configure in comparison.

bastion,

It’s like btrfs, but faster, and less prone to data loss.

acockworkorange,

Btrfs is data loss prone? OpenSUSE Tumbleweed uses it as default, I assumed it was good enough.

umbrella,
@umbrella@lemmy.ml avatar

Thats why I’m still on trusty old ext4. Dunno if this is true but I dont want to risk data loss.

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Ext4 just went through a data loss fix in the kernel, too.

pbjamm,
@pbjamm@beehaw.org avatar

BTRFS is honestly really great and has been for the last few years. Dont take the word of random people on the interwebs, check out some modern sources of info on the subject. Some people love to complain about RAID5/6 but if you use BTRFS the BTRFS way then it is solid.

With that said, if you dont need snapshots, drive mirroring, sub volumes, bit rot protection etc then EXT4 is hard to beat for reliability.

acockworkorange,

Snapshots changed my life. And I don’t exactly demand ultra reliability for my home PC. Thanks for the feedback!

cosmicrookie, (edited ) in What are you most excited when it comes to linux in 2024?
@cosmicrookie@lemmy.world avatar

Ps: isn’t ‘guys’ gender nutral, similar to ‘dude’?

acockworkorange,

What about dudette? /s

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I’m Tom Dudette, and I’ll leave the light on for ya. (guitar outro…)

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Dude!

arty,

The classical answer to a male is: do you sleep with guys?

umbrella,
@umbrella@lemmy.ml avatar

sometimes they might

arty,

Sure, and this only strengthens the point of the counter question

moomoomoo309, (edited )
@moomoomoo309@programming.dev avatar

Heh. “Guy” has some interesting history. It originally referred to Guy Fawkes, because that was his name. Then it came to mean any person, gender neutral, then it became any man, now gendered, but the neutral definition never went away, so we have both meanings floating around still, but the original meaning, an effigy of Guy Fawkes, died.

(I skipped a few steps in there because they’re not relevant between guy Fawkes and any person)

const_void, in Looking for LogoFAIL on your local system – Technical Blog of Richard Hughes

I wish more computers shipped with Coreboot these days so we could avoid these kinds of proprietary firmware inflicted problems.

vanderbilt, in Raising the Bar: Introducing the new App Metadata Guidelines
@vanderbilt@beehaw.org avatar

Incredible how fast we see flatpak improving and spreading throughout the ecosystem.

russjr08, in Recent GNOME design work – Form and Function

I will say, though I don’t agree with a lot of the GNOME decisions for their desktop environment, their apps (especially the ones using libadwaita) always look very clean - that new System Monitor is gorgeous!

Siegfried, in Terminal Utility Mega list!

No love for cmus and links2?

MXX53, in Linux in the corporate space

We have primarily used windows servers, but our datalake, data warehouse and internal apps are on Linux servers.

Hjalamanger, in TIL that operating system Linux is an example of anarcho-communism
@Hjalamanger@feddit.nu avatar

Yep, and that’s the beauty of it ❤️🐧

jackpot, in openSUSE Logo Contest Concludes With Winners Selected
@jackpot@lemmy.ml avatar

looks shite

palordrolap,

Do better.

cashews_best_nut,

Like your face.

CrabAndBroom, in openSUSE Logo Contest Concludes With Winners Selected

I think the A031 Tumbleweed logo is actually my favourite there. But the winner’s not bad either.

cashews_best_nut,

It’s cute!!!

dillydogg,

I think that one is the only logo with any soul to it. The rest are so flat! I like the old opensuse logo, but I get that it doesn’t fit with the rest.

MoonMelon, (edited ) in Linux in the corporate space

When I worked in VFX it was mostly Scientific Linux. A few macs were around for concept artists using Photoshop, and editorial using a proprietary video codec with Final Cut. Most business folks (in vfx called “coordinators” and “producers”) used tools that were web-based and cross platform (for example, Autodesk Shotgrid, Confluence, and Jira). A lot of internal development is done in Python so no worries there, either.

In game dev unfortunately it’s exclusively Windows. If you bring up even using os.path.join, instead of hardcoding \ into paths, devs who have never worked in another OS look at you like some sort of paranoid maniac.

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