linux

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wabafee, (edited ) in what caused you to get into Linux?

Job reason, early on my college, realize on my field I would be working on Linux a lot. I installed one on my laptop to get a head start. It was painful, Not being able to use the usual software, did not help that my university don’t even use Linux. I had to keep trying to find workarounds.

code, in what caused you to get into Linux?

Sco xenix way back when was required for work. I decided to run it on my desk Then i had to work on sun machine for a few years. So ive really never been a windows person except for games. Once wine then proton atrted letting me game even a little then i got rid of every windows install i had and replaced with linux

xohshoo, in what caused you to get into Linux?

one too many BSOD
this was 2005 ish

bruhduh, in PipeWire 1.0 Released For Managing Audio/Video Steams On The Linux Desktop
@bruhduh@lemmy.world avatar

Hol up, 1.0? I’ve been using it and thought it was around for few years already

waigl,

In F/OSS, it is not unusual for software to stay below 1.0 version for a long time yet still get a lot of use. Just look at how long OpenSSL, for example, was at 0.9.something, while already being of crucial importance to a lot of internet infrastructure.

The reasons for this are varied, but the most important is probably simply that free software developers don’t feel the pressure to call a product 1.0 when they don’t believe it is ready to be called that.

eruchitanda, in what caused you to get into Linux?
@eruchitanda@lemmy.world avatar

Windows update that ruined 3 months of work.

TheFriendlyArtificer, in Broke a partition. Is there any way of saving it?

Depends on how you “broke” it.

First step is to back up whatever data is there. Boot into a rescue distro like GRML dd the block device to an external hard drive.

If you nuked the partition table, there may be additional work to rebuild it if you used GPT rather than MBR. But gdisk should also tell you if there are backups, which would make your life way easier.

If you still have a partition (like /dev/sda1) but the mount command claims that it cannot find a valid ext signature, you might be able to simply use mkfs.ext4. It’s counterintuitive, but this isn’t destructive and will recreate the filesystem leaving the data alone. And if it does turn out to be destructive, that’s why you have your backup.

To recover from the backup, you can use scalpel or photorec from the testdisk package. Photorec holds your hand and can be run in read-only mode. Caveat: These tools work by looking for specific file headers and makes a best guess as to where it’ll end (if the format doesn’t have a defined footer).

In the car now, but I can respond with more detailed steps if your other options don’t pan out.

synapse1278, in what caused you to get into Linux?
@synapse1278@lemmy.world avatar

Moving from Windows XP to Windows 7, i found that Windows 7 sucked, moved to linux and never looked back.

richardisaguy, in what caused you to get into Linux?
@richardisaguy@lemmy.world avatar

Godot engine broke with windows on my hardware, Simeone suggested me to try out linux, went with ubuntu 18.10 i think. Have been using linux ever since

TheAnonymouseJoker, in What are people daily driving these days?
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

Debian 12 Stable with GNOME

After having used Ubuntu LTS for 6 years, I find a little more peace with Debian. I do not like systems that break. Debian Stable is IMPOSSIBLY HARD to break, even more than Ubuntu LTS, which only broke once because of my stupidity of installing ProtonVPN client and using VPN killswitch through it. Switched to using OpenVPN/Wireguard config files.

dan,
@dan@upvote.au avatar

Debian doesn’t break often because they don’t change things just for the sake of changing them. Nice and stable. Even if you do break something, a guide published 5 years ago describing how to solve the problem would probably still mostly work today.

TheFriendlyArtificer, in Ubuntu Budgie switches its approach to Wayland

Oooh! Let me guess!

Every library involved in rendering the screen will now be in its own Snap?

isVeryLoud,

Snaps! Snaps everywhere!

fossisfun, in What are people daily driving these days?
@fossisfun@lemmy.ml avatar

Until a couple of weeks ago I used Fedora Silverblue.

Then, after mostly using GNOME Shell for about a decade, I (reluctantly) tried KDE Plasma 5.27 on my desktop due to its support for variable refresh rate and since then I have fallen in love with KDE Plasma for the first time (retrospectively I couldn’t stand it from version 4 until around 5.20).

Now I am using Fedora 39 Kinoite on two of my three devices and Fedora 39 KDE on a 2-in-1 laptop that requires custom DKMS modules (not possible on atomic Fedora spins) for the speakers.

Personally I try to use containers (Flatpaks on the desktop and OCI images on my homeserver) whenever possible. I love that I can easily restrict or expand permissions (e. g. I have a global nosocket=x11 override) and that my documentation is valid with most distributions, since Flatpak always behaves the same.

I like using Fedora, since it isn’t a rolling release, but its software is still up-to-date and it has always (first version I used is Fedora 15) given me a clean, stable and relatively bug-free experience.

In my opinion Ubuntu actually has the perfect release cycle, but Canonical lost me with their flawed-by-design snap packages and their new installers with incredibly limited manual partitioning options (encryption without LVM, etc.).

avidamoeba, (edited ) in what caused you to get into Linux?
@avidamoeba@lemmy.ca avatar

Windows used to break all the time, Microsoft was evil, that Ubuntu thing showed up.

ObviouslyNotBanana, in what caused you to get into Linux?
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve always run Linux on my laptops. Now however I’ve switched on my gaming desktop as well, after W11 started randomly waking from sleep. Haven’t had an issue yet. Sure, not everything gaming wise is entirely perfect (though tbh you could almost believe the games were built for Linux) but I figure that if I don’t switch why would anyone else do so?

Cysioland, in what caused you to get into Linux?
@Cysioland@lemmygrad.ml avatar

The desire to be alternative and different, and now I can’t use Windows for too long

walthervonstolzing, in what caused you to get into Linux?
@walthervonstolzing@lemmy.ml avatar

My Mac died, at which time I was already a commandline enthusiast, & unable to afford a new Mac.

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