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agent_flounder, in Just moved to Linux: a follow up
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Sweet, welcome! :) I know the feeling. I just finished reinstalling Nobara after being dumb and goofing up patching. Then I tried to fix it and made the system totally unusable and I gave up.

A while ago I jacked my grub config and decided to try to fix it manually. I managed to stumble through it and learned some stuff, though I am still fuzzy on some details.

I mostly want to just use the computer without a lot of headache and both Mint and Nobara have been great for coding (various), electronics design, 3d modeling and printing, graphics, photo editing, and such.

Corr,

This is why I gave up on fixing it yesterday lol. I spent a few days setting it up, I didn’t wanna spend a few more days to try to figure out exactly what the issue was when I could just give in and then actually use it

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Totally valid! Theoretically with more experience it may be easier / faster to fix but…idk

See this is why I keep /home on a separate partition (or drive in some cases). I can reinstall or switch distros anytime without worrying about all my files (they’re backed up, anyway but doing a restore is a pita).

be_excellent_to_each_other, (edited ) in Just moved to Linux: a follow up
@be_excellent_to_each_other@kbin.social avatar

One of us! One of us!

Although I think having to fix a borked bootloader is a good bit of experience, it's probably not something you are always going to want to spend time on. I have used boot-repair only once, but it was like magic. Just throwing it out there for your future use and a general recommendation. :)

https://sourceforge.net/p/boot-repair/home/Home/

chitak166, in As a normal, boring user that does nothing special other than browse the internet and the occasional "casual coding" -- what am I supposed to do with 32GiB of ram?

Nothing. Don’t make up problems for your hardware, lol.

I’m guessing you listened to someone who didn’t know what they were talking about.

GustavoM, in Just moved to Linux: a follow up
@GustavoM@lemmy.world avatar

Trial-and-error is a beautiful thing, isn’t it?

t. Had to reinstall GNU/Linux several times through the course of months while trying new stuff and/or trying to improve the current ones.

AlijahTheMediocre, in are tiling WM good only for terminal?

Only problem with Tiling WM’s is the learning curved. Looking forward to Gnomes Mosaic TWM to bridge the gap between floating and tiling

bulwark, in Just moved to Linux: a follow up

I’ve messed up my system so many times over the years that now I think I secretly get excited when it accidentally happens. Maybe I’m a masochist, but I actually enjoy trying to understand what went wrong. A USB stick with a light weight Linux distro and chroot you can usually get back in there and look around at the damage.

Corr,

I think you may need help… I bid you good luck on your recovery :P

juli, in Just moved to Linux: a follow up

I’m on fedora silverblue and that won’t ever happen again to me

Bitrot,
@Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Still possible to break your bootloader.

jvrava9, in Just moved to Linux: a follow up
@jvrava9@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Timeshift for backups is a godsend in these situations

Dariusmiles2123,

OP should just know that TimeShift doesn’t work on Fedora Workstation without some tinkering.

Bluefruit,

Thats good to know because Fedora seems to be where im heading when i make the switch as well.

just_another_person, in Just moved to Linux: a follow up

Friendo, I think once you understand exactly what an OS is, you’ll have fewer problems. An OS is just a layer on top of hardware with a lot of scripts and tools that enable that hardware to do things like move files, show graphics, and send audio in a desktop environment. Never issue a root or sudo command unless you understand exactly what it’s doing. Following this one simple rule will save you a lot of trouble, same as any Windows machine.

Corr,

This is reasonably valid. I think Windows makes it a bit harder to do real damage to your system, so I’m used to that. I also have borked installs in VMs before, but that’s never mattered because spinning up a new one takes no time. Definitely a valuable lesson to do more research before running commands, especially as sudo

Dariusmiles2123,

Also, once your install is in a state you like, create a backup with CloneZilla.

just_another_person,

Nah. This is old school thought. Use an immutable distro if this is your concern, and keep all your files on a NAS, or something else that can replay your files. Local images of your entire filesystem isn’t needed anymore.

Valmond,

And a lot of configuration, or so I thought? I’m investing heavily but I’m scared for my investments :-)

Another Linux noob here, after a couple of Linux servers (Tenfingers, Lemmy) switched over (finally) my main PC, or well kids got the gaming machine and I’m on a Mint ThinkPad now :-) and a backup think centre tiny if the Lemmy server bails out.

I have this little windows box to print stuff (I didn’t know I hated printers) and every time I use it I’m so happy I don’t need windows in my personal life anymore…

Cheers and welcome OP!

just_another_person,

This comment isn’t making any sense to me, but good on ya?

Valmond,

Except that I’m jumping ship to Linux fully, I’m thinking a lot about hardware failure, not the data but say the mobo, so maybe that’s curious. Seemed you were knowledgeable about those things, or I’m explaining very badly.

Cheers

Ultimatenab, in Just moved to Linux: a follow up

One of us, one of us. I did the same only 2-3 hours into my first ever Linux install.

Corr,

I feel your pain :P
I’m almost done getting everything back, I think!

juli, (edited )

How long until you start doing backups? 😂

Edit: Took me some years btw

Corr,

I was trying to set up snapper, so sorta on my way there lol

bismuthbob, in are tiling WM good only for terminal?
@bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz avatar

I use a tiling WM for everything. Libreoffice, games, Firefox/Chromium, file managers, etc. It all works and it is a great way to handle multiple monitors.

callyral, in are tiling WM good only for terminal?
@callyral@pawb.social avatar

Yes, I’m using swaywm right now and I’m typing this comment on Firefox.

Although most (if not all) tiling window managers are configured with a text editor, not a settings program.

YaBoyMax, in Is there any future for the GTK-based Desktop Environments?

That KDE Plasma 5 is finally usable and stable, after having decided to stop pushing the ridiculous plasmoids on the user […] is like having an old whore finally becoming a respectable woman.

Yeah, I stopped reading here.

crusty,

Wow that’s pretty gross

Caboose12000,

what the actual fuck

possiblylinux127, in As a normal, boring user that does nothing special other than browse the internet and the occasional "casual coding" -- what am I supposed to do with 32GiB of ram?

Virtual Machines?

theshatterstone54, in Poll: GUI framework for widgets/apps in Wayland

I’ve played around with (only played around with, I haven’t done any actual development with either but I’ve heard they’re similar) GTK, QT and Tk (actually tkinter from Python), and QT seems the most intuitive. It just feels right to me, compared to the others.

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