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hollyberries, in Best lesser-known distribution/DE for low-end machines?
@hollyberries@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Puppy Linux is what I shove on old Atom netbooks

mfat,

Can I run regular browsers on Puppy? Or have to use their own apps only?

hollyberries,
@hollyberries@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I’m afraid I can’t answer that, It’s been quite a while. I think qutebrowser is the one that ships with it?

nyan,

Subject lines on their forum suggest Firefox and Chromium are both possible.

bbbhltz, in Best lesser-known distribution/DE for low-end machines?
@bbbhltz@beehaw.org avatar

I guess it depends on what comes with the distro. If you start off with a basic Linux install and add a DE that is low on system resources, like LXQt, you can breathe life into a machine.

Bodhi, antiX and Linux Lite come to mind.

You can also start with a minimal base, Arch, Debian, Alpine, anything, and then add packages.

WalrusByte, in Best lesser-known distribution/DE for low-end machines?
@WalrusByte@lemmy.world avatar

Alpine is very lightweight. I think it was built so that it would run well inside docker containers, which means it should be fairly easy for low-end computers to run it.

Afaik, it doesn’t come with a DE out of the box, so it won’t be very user-friendly

lemmyvore,

It has a script called setup-xorg-base that will install the basic graphical support, and you can add a specific DE on top. For example.

WalrusByte,
@WalrusByte@lemmy.world avatar

Oh ok, cool!

flashgnash, in Fonts

Comic Shanns mono all the way

Grant_M, (edited ) in Best lesser-known distribution/DE for low-end machines?
@Grant_M@lemmy.ca avatar

Bodhi! Another I’ve found to be lean is Zorin Lite

ipsirc,
@ipsirc@lemmy.ml avatar

*buntu can’t be counted as lightweight.

atomkarinca, in Best lesser-known distribution/DE for low-end machines?

alpine and void linux are pretty lightweight.

Pantherina, in GNOME Recognized as Public Interest Infrastructure

I prefer KDE currently, because

  • normal application tray and buttons for close, maximise and minimize
  • dolphin ! (But any capable filemanager with spacesaving UI, extensions, an editable location bar, drag/drop dialogs, selection mode, preview, pinned favourites, kfind integration,… would do)
  • spectacle
  • kate
  • systemsettings (keyboard shortcuts, theming, mouse speed, Graphic tablet, flatpak permissions, system info, …)

are all simply better than the GNOME counterpart. Also things like the clickboxes of decorations actually reaching to the top corner is something so obvious its crazy that GNOME simply ignores that and you need to directly point to the “x”.

I like that Gnome is untraditional though.

stockRot,

Windows XP’s grip ever tightens well past its death

Pantherina,

Did the windows before not have regular menu with all that? I think its an okay concept, even though I can imagine something like workspaces could make sense too.

HiddenLayer5, (edited )
@HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml avatar

Good design is good design.

M137,

As the first paragraph says: “The GNOME Foundation is thrilled to announce the GNOME project is receiving €1M from the Sovereign Tech Fund to modernize the platform, improve tooling and accessibility, and support features that are in the public interest.

Let’s hope that means improving all that.

ILikeBoobies,

Gnome has the best accessibility tools for disabled people

It’s often glossed over

milicent_bystandr,

I’m also on KDE at the moment, but I appreciate the money going into FOSS desktop experience. Most importantly as keeping things viable for the future. Also KDE and GNOME both, one presumes, learn from each others successes.

MangoPenguin, in How to download ALL dependencies for an external .deb package (rescuezilla)?
@MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Would it be easier to use Clonezilla? It looks like it supports encryption.

iturnedintoanewt,
@iturnedintoanewt@lemm.ee avatar

The whole mechanism of working of Clonezilla is about the least intuitive I have ever found. So many chances for errors/mistakes, especially if you’re trying to do a network backup. Rescuezilla invokes clonezilla as a backup mechanism, but it saves you all the trouble with a way more intuitive UI. It’s been a revelation to me since I found about it, and refuse to use clonezilla alone.

MangoPenguin,
@MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Yeah that’s for sure, it’s pretty user hostile.

It’s not open source but I absolutely love Veeam Agent, it will backup an online system with encryption, very easy to use, and they provide a bootable recovery image to restore from.

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

Another not-Linux Linux based operating system. Can’t wait to argue same as with Android and ChromeOS that this is not like “real” desktop Linux looks.

We really should stick to calling it GNU or something.

jcarax,

Definitely not GNU, that’s even worse than calling it Linux. We should simply call it by it’s own name, Vega or whatever it ends up being. Android is Android. ChromeOS is ChromeOS. We can acknowledge they utilize the Linux kernel and some other open source code, and as such give some back. But they are not what we refer to as Linux, as that is a spirit as much as if not more than it is a collection of software.

LeFantome, (edited )

I completely agree.

An OS is defined by its ecosystem ( applications, users, and philosophy ). Everybody knows what an actual Linux distribution is and the kinds of desktop environments ( eg. GNOME, KDE, XFCE ) and applications that Linux implies ( eg. Docker, Podman, Emacs, GIMP, OBS, LibreOffice ). It does not matter if the C library is Glibc or MUSL. It does not matter if things were compiled with GCC or Clang. It does not matter who wrote the version of ‘ls’ installed. It is not confusing when somebody tells you they are using “Linux” on the desktop, the server, or the cloud. You know what they mean.

Saying GNU / Linux does not add any clarity in my view and could be confusing or wrong. If you use Alpine in the cloud, you are using Linux ( very clear ) but not GNU / Linux. If you are using Void on your desktop, you are using Linux ( but maybe not Glibc ). Is one version of Void Linux called GNU / Linux and the other one isn’t? It is not a useful label other than politically.

Android and ChromeOS use the Linux kernel but are not Linux distributions by any useful use of that term. If I switch you from Void to Arch, you could use it for hours without noticing the change. You might not notice until you went to update software. If I moved you to Android or ChromeOS, you would certainly notice right away. In some ways, Windows is a more similar environment than Android is.

If I say, “I use Linux”, you do not have to ask me if I mean Android or if I have a Chromebook. People that don’t “know” that these other systems use the Linux kernel would never make that mistake. The “confusion” is artificial.

As a non-Linux example, is there anybody that is confused that the XBox uses the Windows kernel? Even if I say “I game on Windows”, would you honestly wonder if I meant XBox? Or would it be super obvious that I meant on a PC?

If I say, “I game on Linux”, you again know that I do not mean Android or ChromeOS ( unless I am purposely trying to be arrogant or funny about it ). You might ask if I am using a Stream Deck but, guess what, the Deck also boots into KDE. It really is Linux.

My Nest thermometer and my IP camera both run the Linux kernel as well. Do we need a special name for them? No. Nobody is truthfully confused by that either. Would we call them GNU / Linux even if they use Glibc? I hope not. So what does GNU / Linux even refer to outside of the political meaning?

Satelllliiiiiiiteeee, in Fonts
@Satelllliiiiiiiteeee@kbin.social avatar

I used to use Inter Semibold as my main UI font but recently moved over to SF Pro Text Semibold. I've been consistently using the Nerd Fonts version of Fira Code for terminal/IDE

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

Well i think it will help us to access more apps

pezhore, in Alternative to docker-tcp-switchboard, but for tcp and virtual machines?
@pezhore@lemmy.ml avatar

I throw CTFs for a living (among other things), and I’m happy to help out a fellow Infosec person.

What kind of infrastructure can you deploy? Is this going to be in the cloud, on-prem (via a hypervisor like Proxmox/vSphere, or hosted on a single laptop/server?

moonpiedumplings,

Nothing in the cloud.

We have a proxmox cluster, which is where this would probably go, but I would prefer a non-integrated solution, rather a single thing I can either put within a proxmox vm (nested virtualization) or on an on premise piece of physical hardware.

pezhore,
@pezhore@lemmy.ml avatar

So first, let me be clear - I don’t know if an alternative to that software you first brought up. But some of our earlier CTFs had a similar issue with isolation.

We ended up spinning up new VLANs per contestant, each having a single Kali Linux VM with xrdp, along with each contestants target systems. Our router/fw blocked all access in/out of those VLANs, save for RDP/SSH traffic from our Apache Guacamole server on the DMZ.

So contestants would hit our portal (Guacamole), then from there connect into their own dedicated Kali instance and environment.

Later, we had to make additional fw exemptions for our scoreboard/docs, etc.

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

So they want more control over what people are able to install

aquasteel,

The more you control something, the easier it is to take your 10% 15% 20%

hydroel, (edited )

I think it’s even simpler than that: they want a share of Google’s data, and more control about what ads they can show to their customers constantly. Their hardware platforms are okayish and sold for a quite low price, but they monetize it on ads.

cole,
@cole@lemdro.id avatar

Amazon’s Fire devices already have this, they don’t use Android with Google, they use the fully open source version. They can collect any data they want already

Patch, (edited )

Exactly this. There’s no nefarious motive to doing this, because Amazon can already do everything nefarious that they want to do with their current Android-based Fire OS.

I’m actually willing to take Amazon’s reasoning at face value for this. They say that Android is too heavyweight and inflexible for embedded IoT devices, and that they want to build something lighter. This makes plenty of sense, and is indeed something that Google themselves have also said as justification for their move to Fuschia for their own embedded devices.

For Linux fans, it’s probably a good thing that Amazon has chosen another Linux-based architecture rather than doing as Google are doing and moving off Linux to a different kernel.

Strit, in Screencasting tools with Wayland support
@Strit@lemmy.linuxuserspace.show avatar

I know newer versions of Spectacle can do short video recordings. But that’s a Plasma app.

lemillionsocks, (edited ) in Amazon Building its Own Linux-Based OS to Replace Android
@lemillionsocks@beehaw.org avatar

All I have to ask is why though? They already have access to skinned aosp and from there can(and do)quite a bit of tweaking on their own. Fireos has been a worse version of android for some time now and Im unsure what the benefit of making their own in house OS would be.

If it’s a true GNU/Linux OS with compatibility with linux programs, then that would be kind of neat, and if it’s open enough to let advanced users install flatpaks(I suspect it’s going to be immutable so at least flatpaks would be nice) then that could be neat. Currently it’s very easy to sideload on fireos devices and even install the play store in full so it’s possible the end product could be more like the steamdeckOS which is very much a user friendly store front end with a power user true linux experience underneath.

That said, for some reason I suspect that they will be locking things down even more and its going to be one of those many user facing linux devices that’s technically linux but very limited. Like a smart fridge interface or something. If this is the case then dropping android support would be a bad move. You lose easy/lazy portability to your store from developers who already have a product to sell and you lose many apps that already exist, and for power users you lose access to the many apps that can easily be side loaded like tachiyomi(though I imagine amazon would rather you buy from them than buy their subsidized $80 tablets to read pirated manga/comics and library books on libby)

But who knows if they actually do an OK job this could lead to a new wave of GNU compatible touch forward apps for the rest of us. Linux has gotten a lot better at touch forward design over the last 4 or 5 years on its own, but its still fairly rough.

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