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h3ndrik, (edited ) in Sell Me on Linux

You need to try it. Don’t just roll it out in your business. Try it yourself before. Get an old/secondary computer and install it, try your templates and workflows. See which version (distribution) you like. Get your E-Mail connected and so on.

I can tell you Linux isn’t Windows or MacOS. For me, it works very well. I can do lots of things Windows users can not do or that are very cumbersome there, and I don’t have any advertisements or privacy issues. It respects my rights and freedoms as a user. And I’ve had way less issues with my printers and stuff than my windows-friends. I’ve never had a virus on my machine. I can’t tell you if it works for you.

I also don’t like selling it. It’s (arguably) better, faster and more user-friendly than Windows in many ways. But you need to find out if you can make use of it. One big factor against it would be familiarization with a different product. Except for that, I invite you to try it.

Presi300, in Best lesser-known distribution/DE for low-end machines?
@Presi300@lemmy.world avatar

AntiX/MX Linux, I’ve had great success getting them to boot on systems that were refusing to boot anything else, AntiX is my go-to distro for bringing new life to old hardware, it works with literally anything you throw at it.

mateomaui, (edited ) in Sell Me on Linux

In addition to using virtual machines, remember that once a virtual machine is installed, you can use 7zip (or any zipping program) to archive the whole folder containing the vm files, so if something screws up on the vm, you can reset by deleting the folder, restore it from the zipped archive, and trying again without having to do the whole installation process over and over. You can make as many of those archives as you want as you get a vm install to different milestones.

radioactiveradio, in Shadow Cast: GPU accelerated screen and audio recording for Linux

I like how happy the dood is on the repo profile pic. Like he beat the final boss in Sekiro in one try. 10/10 project.

sonymegadrive,

The pfp is goofy af. It stays 😂

radioactiveradio, in Switched to Linux, don't know what to do

Distrobox. Try distrobox.

Kidplayer_666, in Sell Me on Linux

Regarding the tools, you must take into consideration the fact that you do not have Microsoft apps on Linux (unless you run them through wine or online, which is not ideal). However there are several alternative tools, either open source (libre office-imperfect compatibility, Onlyoffice desktop-better compatibility, incomplete feature set) or closed source (either WPS office or FreeOffice). PDF is an annoying one as unless you feel comfortable with libreoffice draw or you want to do more basic editing, tools for PDF on Linux are kind of lacking

Stillhart, (edited ) in Audio Hardware Question from a Linux newbie

Step one is probably figuring out why the Mojo is turning off. If it’s the USB power going to sleep, the answer could be as simple as running the power USB cable directly to an outlet instead of the computer (which is often better for audio quality anyways). Otherwise, I’d look into the spdif link that the other person posted.

qyron, (edited ) in Best lesser-known distribution/DE for low-end machines?

Bunsen Labs Linux and, for the experience, Tiny Core Linux

paradox2011, in Switched to Linux, don't know what to do

From a recovering distro-hopping addict, there’s two ways to dip your toes in to the various Linux experiences:

  1. When you install your distro, partition a separate /home folder that is distinct from your root and boot partitions. There are many good walkthroughs on YouTube on doing this process, it’s fairly simple. Once you do that you can keep your home folder intact as you install different distros over the top. Just make sure to mark you /home folder each time and don’t format it during install.
  2. Like another commenter said, try distrobox. It will allow you to test out the various distro bases pretty conveniently. Another similar option is learning how to set up virtual machines. Again, sounds more difficult than it is. There’s many good videos that walk you through the process.

Aside from the mechanics of testing out different options, I would recommend KDE as a desktop environment. Cinnamon and Gnome are both flexible, but do feel more restricting than I like. You can customize nearly every element of KDE, I really like it.

Really, most distros are fairly similar, aside from using different package managers and having different sets of software pre-installed. The desktop environment is where you’ll experience the most user facing differences.

If you like to tinker, make your way over to an arch based distro at some point. I’ve really enjoyed endeavourOS, but you will need to mess with config files to get your printer working and things like that.

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

As. Someone who is incredibly poor and use my current fire stick as a way to help me because of accessibility for my disabilities. Does anybody know if there’s a alternative to Chromecast, fire stick or Roku that doesn’t involve another computer (which I could get a raspberry pi or another computer dedicated to media, but government doesn’t believe in giving disabled people enough for those things)

interceder270, (edited )

but government doesn’t believe in giving disabled people enough for those things

Instead of subscribing to whatever streaming services you’re using roku for, you could be streaming everything for free here: fmoviesz.to

Use the money you save to buy a raspberry pi and wireless keyboard+mouse combo then you’re off to the races.

thezeesystem,

I don’t pay for my streaming services. My mom who is barley surviving too and others pay for it. Had no choice really. Sense I have zero income it’s hard to save up. (been battling the government for nearly 6 year’s to get SSI or anything to help )

interceder270, (edited )

You always have a choice when it comes to entertainment, especially digital.

Tell your mom who is barely surviving that she can stream more things for free than what she’s getting with her subscriptions.

Spread the love.

cupcakezealot,
@cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar
tslnox,

Miracast is a wireless transmission technology, where the wireless signal is transmitted in a way that does not require any cables.

Thanks, captain Obvious. :-D

Vitaly, in Switched to Linux, don't know what to do
@Vitaly@feddit.uk avatar

idk try pop os, i really like it

franciscosanudo,
@franciscosanudo@mastodon.social avatar

@Vitaly @m5rki5n pop os is great, after being back and forth with ubuntu, debian and later arch. I just came to the conclusion that I wanted to have something that works out of the box.

Vitaly,
@Vitaly@feddit.uk avatar

I ran it for a year with no problems, ubuntu was good but I don’t like snaps so pop os is perfect for me

electric_nan, in Sell Me on Linux

If your budget is tight, get a used/refurb, but recent model Thinkpad (T or P series) from EBay. Install Linux Mint (I say Debian Edition, since that is Mint’s future). It comes with LibreOffice preinstalled. You may want to install standard Microsoft fonts, which aren’t included for licensing reasons. You can search for how do do this.

TrickDacy,
@TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

Debian edition? Never heard of this and apparently neither has their website… Is it replacing Ubuntu as the base with Debian?

electric_nan,

www.linuxmint.com/download_lmde.php

It’s a version of Mint they have been maintaining in case Ubuntu ceases to be a desirable base for the distro. With things like over reliance on Snaps, and advertising paid security updates in the terminal, it seems like it won’t be very long until that point is reached. I love Mint, but dislike those specific aspects it brings from Ubuntu, so I have found LMDE to be the perfect solution.

TrickDacy,
@TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

Thanks so much! This is a really cool idea. I may have to try it out sometime

airikr, in Basic fonts

For me personally, it’s Victor Mono and Iosevka. Victor Mono for desktop and Iosevka for VSCodium.

folkrav,

Iosevka is so great. Not everyone likes the narrow look. I’ve tried other fonts a couple of times since I stumbled on it a good handfuls of years ago, but I always come back.

mb_, (edited )

You can always compile your own Iosevka and adjust several pieces, I have done that selecting what I consider the best pieces a long time ago.

The compiled font lives in an easy to access internal webserver that I just grab from every computer I use (=

bloopernova,
@bloopernova@programming.dev avatar

I like both of those, but my terminal and coding are always in MPlus Code

airikr,

Nice! That font really looked nice through the smartphone. Will try it out in VSCodium when I can. Thanks!

bloopernova,
@bloopernova@programming.dev avatar

I love a good condensed font:

www.programmingfonts.org/#mplus

It doesn’t support ligatures though.

airikr,

Thanks for the link 🙂

snaggen,
@snaggen@programming.dev avatar

Just looked at the screenshot on the Victor Mono page and the kerning makes me want to rip my eyes out…

airikr,

Why? 😄

WhiteHotaru,

Not OP, but if you look at the Hello World code example, the “HelloWorld” class is visually divided at the l’s and the o and W are glued together. Looks more like “Hel l oWorld”.

airikr,

That’s because Victor Mono are a tabular font meaning equal width no matter what character it is :) I find it nice.

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

No, that is not a valid reason to look that bad, JetBrains Mono is a fixed with font and it manages to get the characters evenly distributed.

WhiteHotaru,

If it works for you, that’s fine. You are right with the monospaced font being limited to the boxes. Jetbrains mono uses ligatures to overcome certain spacing limits. On top of this some characters are designed to connect better to their surroundings, as the „l“ mentioned, which is not just a stroke, but connects to the neighboring characters with the top and bottom strokes.

danielfgom, in Sell Me on Linux
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Linux is about protecting your freedom as a pc user. It means the software should always work for you, never against you, and you should have the right to inspect the code, modify it at will, and even sell it on or give it away for free

There are no licence fees, no tie in, and it runs faster on your pc then windows. It doesn’t spy on your nor force updates on you.

It should run on most computers but occasionally you may have to install additional WiFi or graphics card drivers but it’s not that common anymore.

You should definitely test it first, and try do everything you do on Windows, on Linux. To do this you can either install it alongside Windows or on a separate test pc or Intel it in a virtual machine on your pc

You can also use a live usb which lets you see it in action running off a usb stick but you can’t install additional software so it’s a limited experience.

I unequivocally recommend Linux Mint over any other Linux. I’ve seen the other comments but this is by far the best best Linux distro and the one you’ll feel most comfortable on. There are other advantages as well but you’ll learn that.

Linux Mint: linuxmint.com

Virtual box(software for running vm’s): www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads

As for Office you have several choices:

  1. If you pay monthly for Office you can access the full suite online via a browser. It should do everything the desktop version does.
  2. Install Office alternatives that exist for Linux. There are 2 good choices to try:

A) OnlyOffice: www.onlyoffice.com/desktop.aspx

B) WPS Office: www.wps.com

In both cases you’ll need to download the deb file to install it. Deb files are like exe but for Debian and Ubuntu based Linux, think Mint is. They are the most widely available format.

I wouldn’t bother with the built in Libre Office as it’s not quite there yet. OnlyOffice can also do some PDF handling as well. You typically won’t find free PDF software for Linux as it’s proprietary software and companies like OnlyOffice likely pay Adobe some licencing fees to offer PDF edit functionality.

It might sound difficult but it’s not, especially if you enjoy computers. If not, ask an IT or nerd friend you might have for help.

Good luck.

penquin, in Basic fonts
@penquin@lemmy.kde.social avatar

I have Ubuntu, inter and IBM Plex installed on my kde plasma install, but somehow I keep forgetting to set any of them and just keep the noto sans that comes default with KDE. lol

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