linux

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sashanoraa, in NixOS beginner resources

The :nixos.org room on matrix is a great place to ask questions if you get stuck.

0x4E4F, in Dual Boot Best Practices?

Windows: 150GB. Linux: 100GB. The rest: Data.

And don’t forget to disable hybrid shut down in Windows.

Templa,

What about swap space? Is that still a thing?

Turtle,
@Turtle@aussie.zone avatar

Zram is really neat.

0x4E4F, (edited )

That is a good option as well, but for experienced users only and only if you have a lot of RAM and a UPS (or on a laptop with a working battery). Otherwise, power failiures mess that thing up.

0x4E4F, (edited )

You can make a swap file on the main partition where Linux is installed, that’s not a problem.

speck, (edited )

Nice,. thank you. And ntfs for the data format is what I've understood to use

b9chomps,
@b9chomps@beehaw.org avatar

NTFS is the standard for Windows. Nowadays Linux can handle reading/writing NTFS pretty well, but you should probably use the very established ext4 or maybe btrfs for its partition.

0x4E4F, (edited )

For Linux, if you’re a beginner, EXT4. Experienced users - BTRFS.

And ntfs-3g is even better at writing on NTFS than Windows is. There are fragmentation examples online, Windows makes a fragmented mess while ntfs-3g takes great care regarding fragmentation. Plus reads/writes a lot faster than Windows does.

0x4E4F,

Yep, use NTFS. You can access it in both Windows and Linux. You’ll need to install ntfs-3g in Linux. It comes bundled in most mainstream distros, but just in case.

fakeman_pretendname, in Video editor for Linux?

You’ve probably got your answer already, but just wanting to confirm that Kdenlive can do all the things you listed.

Though the editor itself is very easy to use and obvious (if you previously have used premiere etc), you might find the UI for some of the individual effects a bit confusing. There’s tool tips and sometimes help videos and stuff, but you might find yourself dragging a few sliders left and right to find out what they actually do :)

Note that generally speaking, Kdenlive doesn’t currently support graphics-card-accelerated timeline preview very well, so if you’re packing on the effects, you might not get real-time playback in the timeline without “preview rendering”. If you ever used Premiere 20 years ago, it works the same as that.

From memory, Olive has the best “in-timeline” graphics card acceleration - but is otherwise at a much earlier stage of development.

As others have mentioned, some or all of these are also doable in Shotcut, Openshot, Olive.

Also, you might be interested in TJFree Tutorials on YouTube, which has a playlist of Kdenlive tutorials - for older versions, but it’s mostly going to be the same. He also has tutorials in loads of other FOSS creative software. I found he tended to be “clear and efficient” and doesn’t take 5 minutes to give you 1 minute’s information.

KISSmyOS,

Thank you, I’ll keep that in mind if I need to do more.
Currently, I just have a 5 minute clip that needs cutting, stabilizing and some color correction, and Shotcut let me do that without tutorials or manuals.

fakeman_pretendname,

Brilliant - I’ll have to have a look at Shotcut again. It used to be quite “crashy”, but it’s been in solid continual development for a few years now.

Dogeek, in File transfer to USB drive fails after 4.3 gb

People suggested formatting to exFAT which is valid, but first you could just try either compressing the file (tar czvf file tarball.tgz for instance). FAT32 cannot handle files larger than 4GB, and compression might just make your file small enough.

As a workaround you could also split it in half and stich it back on the target machine

snekerpimp, in Switching to Debian on my gaming pc

I switched from arch to Debian bookworm for my work/gaming pc, and I have no regrets. Same amount of time setting up as arch, because of the newer kernel on bookworm you don’t have many prerequisites to install. Was gaming within an hour or two. That was six months ago, and things don’t break all the time like arch, where they would fix graphics drivers, but doing so would bork the sound. I play everything from factorio to cyberpunk, no issues. Only thing I can not get running for the life of me on windows or Linux is forza motorsports.

I don’t think distro matters as much anymore with modern Linux. There are enough tutorials out there on most of them, should be easy to get setup on almost anything.

arthur,

From Arch to Debian, that’s a 180° on stability. But to be honest, I’m using arch for 2 months now and everything seems very stable. I had no problems, yet.

snekerpimp,

I never had an issue with system stability with Arch. It was just tiring every day making sure everything was up to date. Updates would break little things, like audio or some wine dependencies and I would just have to deal till I ran updates the next day. Meanwhile with Debian, the only issue I have ran into was with lutris and battle.net, and that turned out to just be a problem with mangohud.

FQQD, in Video editor for Linux?

Kdenlive or Shotcut, or if you want something more powerful but not open source, Davinci resolve.

KISSmyOS,

Thanks. I tried both, and Shotcut was the one where I actually understood how to import, edit and export a video without consulting the manual, so I’m going with that.

Grass, in What distros have you tried and thought, "Nope, this one's not for me"?

Alpine. I actually really like it, but it just doesn’t fit any of my use cases.

corsicanguppy, in Based KDE 🗿

Based

I can’t wait until community ADHD picks another inscrutable word to mutter arbitrarily and signal clique membership.

ikidd,
@ikidd@lemmy.world avatar

What weirds me out is that this was a Maga/redpill thing to start with.

tricoro,

I remember it first from twitch, many years ago.

zwekihoyy,

that’s the joke

smileyhead,

Better teach yourself what ADHD is if you ever want to get out of your basement.

psud, (edited )

I like the word, it fits well with biased which is approximately opposite

My least favourite new word is ‘doom scrolling’ which is now used to mean “scrolling internet feeds mindlessly” where it originally meant “constantly refreshing the internet feed in the hope the result of the American presidential election will change”

I’d be happy if it was used in another doomy context

fury, in Based KDE 🗿

Me still trying to figure out how to get it to auto start / auto login on boot on my fresh new Raspberry Pi 5 without locking up at a flashing cursor screen: 😩

psud, (edited )

I haven’t had luck with auto login, as soon as it’s logged in it wants a password to unlock its keyring

I wish installers let you set low local security mode. We don’t all need strong security, some of us are just playing games

HurlingDurling, in Based KDE 🗿

Currently, dual booting Fedora and Windows 11 on my Asus gaming laptop, and I love Fedora, but it’s still not full sailing. Every other boot the wifi card doesn’t register and I have to reboot, others the OS freezes even though Grub doesn’t but nothing actually opens or closes, and lastly if the laptop is on battery and goes into hibernation, waking it up takes around 5-10 minutes. To add that gaming is still not as smooth as it is with windows, and I still have a use for Windows pOS.

1984,
@1984@lemmy.today avatar

Have you tried another distro like Pop OS?

teamevil,

I’m using Pop OS on a couple devices and I like it, but it also gets temporary hung up frequently. It’s irritating when I’m only doing one thing.

1984,
@1984@lemmy.today avatar

Yeah it depends a lot on the hardware. I have one laptop with Linux that is wonky sometimes because it has Nvidia graphics. But my stationary with amd is awesome, always works 100%.

HurlingDurling,

Unfortunately, the drivers aren’t available as easily with other distros. The main issue is that my laptop is an ASUS laptop, awesome laptop most of the time, but it’s not easily supported by Linux

EvokerKing,

That isn’t a problem with Linux, as much as I hate it. It’s a problem with Asus, which I hate more. Asus is known for having many unfixable bugs on everything they have similar to these but even this isn’t as severe as most people get where their audio will go out for days on end.

Nahdahar,

I’ve tried Fedora 3 times years apart in my life and never had a good experience. The longest time I used a distro was with Elementary OS and Zorin OS, the latter of which I’m currently on.

localhost443,

Been running Linux as primary is for 10-15 years now, used to distro hop a lot, often just because. Life is too busy for that now but I last installed fedora (KDE, I always run KDE out of preference) about 5 years ago and I’m really impressed. The system is very current but its always remained stable for me and upgrading from version to version is smoother than normal security patches on win 10 which I still run for CAD.

Are you all up to date? Tbh I do agree with the other post, ASUS have terrible QA and don’t care.

psud,

Framework sell laptops with Linux

Franzia, in Based KDE 🗿

Linux is the modern OS and windows is just a bunch of old shitty technology in a trench suit.

mrcleanup,

Yeah, but that old technology is what still lets me run a 13 year old version of Adobe creative suite. If that ever changes I will have to learn something new!

Franzia,

We will perhaps never beat adobe but nowadays there are some amazing tools!

… Which are developed for windows as well. Haha.

allywilson,

This is kinda how I feel about Windows these days. It’s interface, directory structure, shudder the registry, user specific apps (from MS Store or Winget), buttons being inserted into the menu bars on some apps, but not others, button sizes being different sizes, some parts still using the Metro interface. The whole thing either needs a re-write, or should be dropped and something new to replace it. Don’t even get me started on things like the eventvwr hanging for 20 seconds after it opens, event tracer API, their in-house abandonment of powershell modules once powershell was open sourced, Windows containers being a disaster, etc.

teatowel,

The problem is that so much critical infrastructure around the world relies on ancient Windows software. I’m pretty sure their backwards compatibility is one of the reasons there’s so much inconsistency in Windows, and every iteration seems to just add more bloat on top.

allywilson,

They hired the man behind systemd (controversial, I know, but he does have a vision). I hope they listen to him and/or he starts directing how they should do things from the ground-up.

AntEater,
@AntEater@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

I hope they listen to him and/or he starts directing how they should do things from the ground-up.

I hate Windows and would love to see ruined too.

psud,

There was a TCP/IP bug that shared it’s exploit on versions of windows from windows for workgroups 3.11 (which you ran from the DOS prompt by typing ‘win’) through to windows 7 (which was the new hotness at the time)

That’s a bug conserved from the very first Microsoft implementation of TCP/IP through to the state of the art at the time

People were surprised at the time that it wasn’t a windows NT bug

allywilson,

That’s surprising, as I think the first Windows TCP/IP stack was ported over from BSD by Spider Systems (pretty sure that’s why it still has things like “/etc/hosts” - albeit under System32). Wonder if the bug was in BSD and never backported (cross ported?).

SGHFan, in Based KDE 🗿
@SGHFan@lemdro.id avatar

And you can’t get de-crufted Win11 outside Europe! Another win for Plasma!

psud,

You can, but it takes a little effort

bitrate, in Switching to Debian on my gaming pc

I’m in a similar boat as you and my current plan is to switch to PopOS. They are Ubuntu/Debian based so you will be familiar with it, and they also are a distro that is more focused on gaming, so you will have an easier time with video card drivers.

Bizarroland,
@Bizarroland@kbin.social avatar

The only issue that I have with pop OS is that it seems unnecessarily slow at times.

I'm running a Lenovo legion 5 with a 10750x, 32 gigs of ram, and a 2060 in it and sometimes it would feel a full second between when I click the button and when something happens.

Fedora was a little bit better about that, but I don't use that because of the weird politics surrounding Fedora right now.

Now I'm on a mint cinnamon and it's actually pretty good, although I have yet to try playing any games from steam on it.

The other issues I have is that Fedora would keep my Bluetooth speakers connected between reboots but both pop OS and Linux cinnamon require that I manually reconnect every time.

LifeCoffeeGaming,

I was in a similar boat to you, but then I installed pop and just gave it a go. Stuck it on a separate hd for now but with everything setup and working I’m very happy with it.

BuddyTheBeefalo, in Based KDE 🗿

In the newest windows, it is even possible to hover the volume icon and change it with the mouse wheel!!!

starman,
@starman@programming.dev avatar

I have the same functionality on my waybar

SomethingBurger,

Does clicking on it open the mixer, or still the useless menu which should be accessible with a right click instead?

ObviouslyNotBanana,
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

Menu

flying_sheep,
@flying_sheep@lemmy.ml avatar

KDE had that pretty much since the invention of the mouse wheel.

zingo,

Still not going back to Windows!

LOL!

callyral,
@callyral@pawb.social avatar

Wait, they didn’t have that before? Heck, even my sway install with Waybar has this.

psud,

But you still need to get at the audio settings to tell it that it should use your microphone for a microphone, not the USB camera

atk007, in What distros have you tried and thought, "Nope, this one's not for me"?

NixOS … loved the idea but doing configuration all the time for every little thing became too much of a headache.

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