linux

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

macattack, (edited ) in The Linux Experiment Channel (From Nick) is on Peertube, and it federates right into Lemmy as a community

To follow through Mastodon/Calckey/Firefish/etc, search for this in your instance:

@thelinuxexperiment_channel

e0qdk, in The Linux Experiment Channel (From Nick) is on Peertube, and it federates right into Lemmy as a community
@e0qdk@kbin.social avatar

Doesn't seem to work right on kbin, unfortunately, although it does show up as a magazine: https://kbin.social/m/thelinuxexperiment_channel@tilvids.com

ChaosAD,

Did you try to search in Kbin? In Lemmy we have to search the community in order to federate

e0qdk,
@e0qdk@kbin.social avatar

Yeah; I also tried subbing in case that kicks off federation and searched a few titles to see if they ended up in random incorrectly as well (stuff like that happens sometimes with kbin). The magazine has seen a few microblogs mentioning the channel, and it clearly picked up the avatar/icon, description, etc. somehow, but doesn't seem to be getting any videos as threads/posts and I couldn't find any floating around disconnected either. I think kbin most likely doesn't understand what PeerTube is publishing through AP, but there could always be federation weirdness or something.

Aatube,
@Aatube@kbin.social avatar
spacemanspiffy, in The Linux Experiment Channel (From Nick) is on Peertube, and it federates right into Lemmy as a community

I wish the Freetube app supported Peertube feeds.

uzay,

I’m happy that NewPipe does

ruplicant,
@ruplicant@sh.itjust.works avatar

yes! i can follow on android with Newpipe but on desktop have to use browser bookmarks

Kushia, (edited ) in Is Ubuntu deserving the hate?
@Kushia@lemmy.ml avatar

Ubuntu attacted a lot of control freaks because Shuttleworth was originally splashing some money when it started and a bunch of nerds saw dollar signs. As a result they have a culture of “not invented here” syndrome where someone just has to reinvent the wheel in only the way they see it and they don’t work well with others or accept their input because they want all the credit.

Personally, I got sick of it having been pretty involved early on in the project. It’s easier and saner to just use a distro based on what everyone else is doing.

somethingsomethingidk, in Getting a Server Running - SteamOS - Best Path Forward?

I have zero experience with SteamOS but Gnome Boxes uses a qemu usermode networking that doesn’t let you access the guest the way you want to.

I would trying using virt-manager (gui for libvirt). It lets you use a bridge as the network interface and for vm gets a proper IP and can communcate on the network like any other computer

Russianranger,

I’ve seen virt-manager recommended in similar situations like mine. I’ll explore it - at first my thought was it may not be ideal as I’ll most likely need to overcome the immutable file system that comes with SteamOS. You can bypass it, but it isn’t ideal as anything written into the innate read only section of the OS is wiped on update. But thinking about it more, I may be able to use distrobox as a way to bypass it. Thanks for the recommendation, I’ll report back with my findings. I also appreciate you mentioning the qemu user mode networking with gnome boxes, that makes sense.

hedgehog, in Getting a Server Running - SteamOS - Best Path Forward?

Re the first route, what is the network mode of your container and which ports are exposed?

How familiar are you with Docker networking? Docker docs are here and may be enough on their own to help you out. If not, there are a ton of guides and tutorials out there that can help.

Russianranger,

Another user commented that gnome boxes is setup in a way that isn’t conducive to what I want, setup as a qemu user bridge mode.

My knowledge of docker is novice at best, I’m only familiar with a handful of commands based on some hand hold levels of tutorials. Thank you for the resource, I’ll research it more to see if I can get a better handle on it.

merthyr1831, in Announcing Brise theme

These are some good tweaks! Personally, especially the smaller changes like uniform sizes for controls, would be worth taking up with the KDE community because they might consider merging them into breeze proper. Unless it doesn’t work like that for theming of course!

TCB13, in Is Ubuntu deserving the hate?
@TCB13@lemmy.world avatar

Is Ubuntu deserving the hate?

Yes.

Debian version is the only one that seems reliable enough but, again, it is Debian, the packages are “old”.

Install Debian, then install all the software you might need using Flatpak. There you go, solid and stable OS with the latest of with little to no effort. Bonus extra security.

superbirra,

or, you know, use testing or sid. Or just stop lamenting for old packages and just enjoy stability while making something productive :)

TCB13,
@TCB13@lemmy.world avatar

Or just stop lamenting for old packages and just enjoy stability while making something productive

I’m not the one lamenting old packages, I run on stable perfectly happy. No issues there.

merthyr1831, in Poll: GUI framework for widgets/apps in Wayland

Flutter gang rise up (though technically it’s just hijacking a GTK window)

disheveledWallaby, in What bootable "live" images of useful tools?

Testdisk, clamxTK, rkhunter or chkrootkit, mobile verification toolkit, lshw, time shift maybe deja-dup.

I think your idea is a good one. Like a linux Swiss Army knife. You can have lots of tools that you don’t need all the time but might be handy in a pinch. Especially if you don’t have internet.

TarquinNimrod,

Testdisk is great. I recently cleaned a drive with diskpart and after the initial 100bpm “oh shit, wrong drive” moment, I fixed the partition structure with testdisk. Took a while, but pretty simple and easy to use.

callcc, in Terrapin Attack – SSH vulnerability

That doesn’t look good :(

PopOfAfrica, in The Linux Experiment Channel (From Nick) is on Peertube, and it federates right into Lemmy as a community

I highly recommend subscribing to his Patreon page since peertube gives him no monetization avenues understandably.

I quite like his podcast he does for Patreon members every week. Just a short life/channel update series.

MonkderZweite,

He has no Liberapay?

boerbiet,

From his video description:

Liberapay: liberapay.com/TheLinuxExperiment/

MonkderZweite,

Thanks! I don’t like videos much.

helenslunch,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

He has a podcast as well, if you’re into that. He actually just interviewed the CEO of Proton Privacy.

JoeKrogan, (edited ) in Is Ubuntu deserving the hate?
@JoeKrogan@lemmy.world avatar

I used to use Ubuntu before unity and switched to Debian 👑 in 2012. I still have to use Ubuntu for work and I just get on with it. It could be worse… I could have to use windows.

Anyway my main gripes with Ubuntu are snaps and how they keep swapping packages in apt to be installed as snaps .

I dont hate it, its a tool and in most cases I can use it and there is no problem if not there are other options.

JoeKrogan, in Terrapin Attack – SSH vulnerability
@JoeKrogan@lemmy.world avatar

Thanks for sharing OP.

videogamesandbeer, in Cannot Install openSUSE or any other Distro

Can you share some details about the machine you’re trying to install it on? Are you able to boot a live image?

mvirts,

Yes this. Imagine posting to a stack themed site, your question would be closed for being incomplete. A screenshot of the failed boot would be great, and some info about the options you chose when installing and the type of machine you’re using.

Sandbag,

I tried uploading a picture, but couldn’t figure out how, I will try again after work.

As for some system information it’s an old Dell Optiplex 710 workstation, it’s has UEFI but no option to turn off secure boot.

skullgiver,
@skullgiver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl avatar

The Optiplex 710 supposedly supports Ubuntu 10 and 11, so booting Linux should be possible. May require installing without UEFI, though.

I know some distros have issues with old Intel GPUs, try booting with nomodeset and the other my-graphics-card-doesnt-work kernel parameters, and figure out what driver options you may need from there. You may need to boot a kernel older than Linux 6.3 for some VERY old GPU hardware to work.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • linux@lemmy.ml
  • localhost
  • All magazines
  • Loading…
    Loading the web debug toolbar…
    Attempt #