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navitux, in Turnip-TV, a tui iptv client (Bash)
@navitux@lemmy.world avatar

I can confirm: it works, amazing, I’ll see if I can add more custom channels

christos,
@christos@lemmy.world avatar

I am glad you like it! Of course you can add more channels, easily, you can find the instructions in the README. Feel free to share them, too.

d3Xt3r, in My few remaining gripes with linux

At least KDE is planning to introduce customisable trackpad gestures next year, with Plasma 6.0. Not sure if that would include palm rejection though or the other stuff.

Grass, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?

They don’t seem to play nice with autostart, on kde at least. Updates sometimes need to retry a couple of times. Other than that no problems on my end. I’m using a read only root fedora spin and mainly distrobox-export apps on arch for anything missing, or rpm-ostree for the odd thing I need to start at boot.

AlexanderESmith, in How to choose a computer/laptop/device that is better compatible with linux? Are there certain things to look out for when shopping?
@AlexanderESmith@kbin.social avatar

@Macaroni9538

I've been using Clevo laptops for years. Large user base, lots of great Linux support. I just run Ubuntu, haven't had many issues (and no critical issues).

They usually get rebranded, and I've gotten them through IBuyPower, Origin, and... can't remember the other one. My most recent one was just straight up marketed as a Clevo, got it on Amazon.

You might have one or two odd issues (like having to install custom code to configure the RGB key backlights), but there are plenty of users to ask for assistance on various forums and repos.

hatchet, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?

I haven’t figured out an easy way to install a specific version of an app, which means that when an app update is broken I’m out of luck until a fix is released, so I’ll install the snap of the app until then (Spotify is a recent example). Don’t like that.

upperleft, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?

My experience with flatpak has been stellar from a technical perspective has been stellar.

Where it currently falls short for me personally is trust. With my distro I am putting my trust into the maintainers, but with flatpak its… random people for most apps?

It is tough when it is not a primary channel of distribution for most devs, but I am optimistic that will change in the future.

Evotech,

It’s sandboxed though. Running an app from a developer already implies trust on your part. So if it’s sandboxed away from your other stuff, what’s the issue?

upperleft, (edited )

Sandboxed just means an app can’t reach out to the rest of the OS. What about the information I am entrusting to it to process?

If my browser is a flatpak, it likely has access to most of the information I care about. If I am using a chat app that is a flatpak, it can read my most personal communications. Why do I care if it can read what is in /etc?

Relevant: xkcd.com/1200/

Running an app from a developer already implies trust on your part.

You totally missed my point. My point was that a lot of flatpaks are packaged by unknown third parties. I would love it if the devs would package things as flatpaks directly, but that is mostly not the case.

Looking at flathub right now. 1567 applications are from unverified publishers vs 789 verified. Unverified apps include chrome, edge, chromium, brave, BITWARDEN and signal. All of those applications process highly sensitive information.

silencioso, (edited ) in Turnip-TV, a tui iptv client (Bash)

Looks awesome, I will definitely check it out. I suppose the next step is to create a new program that merges both turnip-tv and radion

christos,
@christos@lemmy.world avatar

Thanks for the feedback.

Well, the two scripts are almost identical, what is more, the radio stations and tv channels lists can be already merged and run together without major issues. However, I feel that I should keep things simple,and the two ‘twins’ separate.

silencioso, in How to choose a computer/laptop/device that is better compatible with linux? Are there certain things to look out for when shopping?

Buy it from tuxedo

Macaroni9538,

man, can’t afford their gear unfortunately. my plan was to get my dell xps 13 9310 fixed (bios stuck in manufacturing mode) then sell that and use whatever I make to purchase my next device. in the mean time I get to use this old old probably decade old asus machine :)

recarsion, in How to choose a computer/laptop/device that is better compatible with linux? Are there certain things to look out for when shopping?

Avoid Kaby Lake processors. I specifically have i7-7600u in my laptop and must use a kernel parameter otherwise it kernel panics freezes minutes after booting. Sometimes it still freezes when waking up from sleep or hibernate. Something to do with power management or such.

Macaroni9538,

Yup my dell xps 13 had kaby lake processors, not all cores though.

Mandy, in Missing mp4 thumbnails in nemo?

so…totem.thumbnailer somehow appeared a second time, removed it AGAIN and now it works, very weird

WindowsEnjoyer, in How to choose a computer/laptop/device that is better compatible with linux? Are there certain things to look out for when shopping?

I think your best bet is Framework laptops. If not, ThinkPads have superior Linux support.

Otherwise, pick your favorite model and read online. Also see if you can find your preferred model on Arch Wiki (laptop page).

Myself some time ago I’ve purchased Asus laptop. Spent quite some time (hobby) to get everything working (e.g. fan control) and documented everything in Arch Wiki.

Then I’ve got Asus Zenbook. Also had to participate in kernel bug report and test, because there were no audio. Eventually it got fixed in upstream and started to work.

Then I’ve got MSI gaming laptop. Had to participate in Intel DRM code issue, because 2K 240Hz panel was limited to 2K60Hz mode and eventually it got fixed too in upstream. Few workarounds are there and there, but eventually got it to work almost 100%, but audio is a bit…broken. Works fine, just first few secs after silence are silent.

Basically what I am trying to tell - manufacturers might introduce software-controlled hardware features that might work only in Windows. It requires experience and extensive knowledge to make everything manageable on Linux. :)

InputZero,

A warning about Framework, they’re on the bleeding edge of modular laptop design (not hardware). So while they may shift laptop design entirely, the bleeding edge always cuts. I don’t know anyone with a Framework laptop and if you’re the first person you know IRL to have one be prepared for unexpected issues. I really hope the idea takes off but I don’t envy the first adopters.

RecallMadness, (edited ) in What has been your experience with Flatpak?

Absolutely fucking awful. I’ve had issues with every one I’ve used.

Been trying to move to silverblue/ublue/sericia.

Firefox comes out of the box as both a system package and a flatpak. The flatpak does WebGL stuff fine, but video is broken; the system package does video, but webgl is broken.

Boxes was the first app I had needed to open a file with, and every time I need to, I have to restart some systemd portal service first. And there’s no guest to host audio.

I always had this problem with Inkscape on standard fedora where the icons on the layers menu would be corrupted. Wasn’t so on my first use of it with flatpak. Great! But subsequent runs the issue returned.

Discord worked fine for a few weeks. Then it started crashing on launch. A bit of googling and installing an old MESA platform flatpak had the problem resolved… for a day.

The only flatpak that has worked without a hitch has been Spotify.

Everything is so different, I have no idea how to debug this shit. And even then, I’m not 15 with unlimited time and zero dollars any more. I don’t have the time to spend 5 hours working out why my image editors icons are wrong.

Having a one-stop distribution-agnostic repository where it’s easy to install software devops-style is a win. (Setting up custom repos, or installing the latest rpm every week (looking at you discord) can be a pain). Buuut I’m not convinced.

elscallr, in My few remaining gripes with linux
@elscallr@lemmy.world avatar

You might check out xfce. It’s gtk like Gnome but the development team doesn’t have their heads up their asses; pretty much every aspect of xfce can be customized. It should be a simple install from your package manager, whatever distribution you’re using. The downside of this, however, is it might take extensive tweaking to get it to look how you want as it’s a pretty bare bones UI by default. Personally I like it, but ymmv.

That’s the beautiful thing about the Linux world. If you don’t like some aspect there’s virtually always an alternative.

rollerbang, in How to choose a computer/laptop/device that is better compatible with linux? Are there certain things to look out for when shopping?

Maybe Slimbook? I haven’t bought one yet but it’s definitely on my close watch.

slimbook.es/en/

Sephtis-6, in What distro for a MacBook pro late 2013 15'

If you want to install linux because it doesn't support the newest mac os version i would recommend opencore patcher. I use it on my 2013 Macbook pro and it works perfectly fine on ventura(mac os 13) and should work fine on mac os 14

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