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fuggadihere, in System76’s Lemur Pro Laptop Is Just a Really Nice Linux Laptop

Modern standby really took things backward for x86 laptops

Fizz,
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

What’s modern standby?

hardaysknight,

IIRC it’s something about not actually going to S3 sleep to keep stuff like networking alive

fuckwit_mcbumcrumble,

Your CPU never actually sleeps, it stays in S0 (on). The CPU is still active and doing things, but it’s in a “low power state”.

In quotes because it’s not low power at all. On one of my laptops S0 standby gets worse battery life than just actually being on.

Fizz,
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

Speak for your own cpu. Mine definitely takes naps every time I try open Firefox

SkySyrup,

Yeah I mean I get C-states for things that idle a lot, like homeservers, but i still don’t see the reasoning for outright replacing traditional suspend on computers. Now you have to worry if some random pcie device is going to up your consumption by 5 watts during suspension. Well, at least that’s only a big issue on laptops.

Sorry for rambling

caesaravgvstvs, in GNOME Recognized as Public Interest Infrastructure

Sovereignty from whom though??

Turns out, the Germans.

Seems like a cool initiative

twei,

yes, we are quite good at funding foss

pingveno,

Sovereignty as in it is sponsored by or own by a nation-state. Similarly, Norway has a sovereign wealth fund derived from its oil profits.

caesaravgvstvs,

Yes! I just kinda posted it as a rethorical question. I think it’s important to know where the money is really coming from :)

beejjorgensen, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?
@beejjorgensen@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

When I needed Windows for a piece of software, I ran Windows on another computer. Later I got into a position where I didn’t need to use that software. 😁

brunofin, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?

Depends on what you do. I take care of this .Net 4.2 backend project which is not compatible with Linux in any safe way. For years I used windows and tbf I enjoyed it, but I am back to Linux and I use a VM with Windows on it to run the project on Rider. I have a setup which allows me to use the backend in this VM and the front-end, database and all rest is native on Linux. It works well for me with the downside of RAM usage, but I designed this laptop with this kind of use case in my from the very beginning so 64GB of RAM I have enough room to run the VM and everything else I need and steel have a snappy environment. I like it better this way, Linux has evolved so much in the past years I am honestly very impressed.

governorkeagan, in What is the best distro for gaming?

Pop!_OS has been great for me.

BURN, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?

I don’t use Linux

Unfortunately alternatives for everything don’t exist. Adobe products, CAD and certain games just will not run under wine. I tried dual booting, but it became too much of a hassle to have to reboot my computer 4-5 times a day

Aatube, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?
@Aatube@kbin.social avatar

I either find an alternative or use it under Wine-GE

squaresinger, in What feature are you dying for to come to your DE - Linux?

A consistent system settings app that actually handles all configs without requireing manual editing of config files.

falsem,

Which DE? With KDE I don't think I've ever had to edit a config file. I do recall that being an issue with Gnome; it's been years since I've used it though.

squaresinger,

XFCE is really bad with this. KDE is much better, but still when setting up something a bit more complicated, you are quickly back to reading man pages. And man pages really aren’t great.

FierroGamer, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?

I generally just avoid it, otherwise I use it on windows, I still use dual boot with windows and Linux, will probably stop after w10 stops getting security updates since I don’t really care all that much about windows specific stuff

cyberwolfie, in Sell Me on Linux

I love Linux since switching nearly a year ago. Yet, I still once in a while find myself in situations where I screw up and I think to myself “Oh, I’m glad this is not my work computer”. If you have no experience with Linux from before, maybe you should consider getting a personal laptop, install Linux on that, and get comfortable using it before transitioning your business to it. That way, the first time you accidentally uninstall your desktop environment (I managed to do this not once, but twice…), it is not 10 minutes before an important client meeting.

indepndnt, in Sell Me on Linux

I’m a CPA and my PC runs Linux, but also has a Windows VM for when I need Excel (unfortunately the open source alternatives just don’t cut it, and I’m guessing it’s similar for someone who relies on Word the way accountants rely on Excel), and my work laptop runs Windows.

If you ever edit PDFs with Acrobat Pro, there’s no good Linux equivalent that I’ve found for that either. It can be done, but you’ll need a couple of different programs depending on what you need to edit in the PDF.

In general I’d say that you can run your business in Linux, but it is probably not the best choice.

HubertManne, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?
@HubertManne@kbin.social avatar

Ill do my usual name drop of zorin os linux distro. its maine thing is windows compatibility and comes with play on linux and wine preinstalled and setup. Also comes with many linux applications installed out of box. I think its the best shot for an easy move over but if it does not work that does not mean it can't be done but its gonna be a bit of work more than likely.

thelastknowngod, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?

What software are you using that is keeping you on windows?

FWIW, the last version of windows I’ve run was WinME circa 2001ish… I’ve been on Linux since '99 or so. You can certainly get by for day to day stuff. The only thing holding you back is going to be pretty niche.

Gabadabs, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?
@Gabadabs@kbin.social avatar

If I'm being totally honest, my primary use-case is gaming. I only have linux installed on my device, and if a game doesn't work, I simply play other things and hope it will eventually work.
Sometimes, with some effort, you can get windows programs to work using wine. For example, I was able to run Mod Organizer 2 to mod skyrim without issues. If that fails and your software won't work in wine, you could either find alternative native linux software or just dual-boot. I used to do that to play VR games in windows 10 since I've had issues running them in linux. Another option is to run a windows Virtual Machine whenever you need whatever software you can't get working, but there's pretty bad performance limitations unless you can get hardware passthrough working.

onlinepersona, in Amazon Building its Own Linux-Based OS to Replace Android

Curious if it’ll be opensource and mobile linux distro. If Amazon gets into the mobile linux game, the mobile phone market might change radically.

PostaL, (edited )

You seem confused. Amazon is in the business of stealing open source project in order to sell them as AWS services, not making them.

onlinepersona,

Then complaining that the license changes and gaslighting the group they steal from.

You’re right.

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