linux

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Jayb151, in I'm Done With Windows, Are you?

I just installed kubuntu on my daily driver. That didn’t go super well so I tried endeavor, also didn’t go well. It could be kde plasma, but it did not feel like Linux is ready to compete for something that is ready out the box.

That said, I run endeavor on my little netbook tablet and it works a wonder, so no idea. I couldn’t even get steam to load on my desktop for some reason. I tried Linux on my desktop for half a day, then decided to run back to Win11 with my tail between my legs. It just wasn’t with the hassle. Steam didn’t work, permissions for my second hard drive for Plex were messed up. I just didn’t want to have to figure it out. I’m back comfy with windows, and just experimenting with my netbook for the time being.

I really wanted Linux to stick this time… Oddly, I was using Ubuntu on my daily driver back in 2012 without a problem.

AVengefulAxolotl,

Its crazy how polarizing the Linux experience can be. Was it a desktop or laptop? For me it was just a few clicks (Manjaro then Endeavour) on the first try and be done with it on my desktop PC. Also with dual booting.

Hopefully next time you will have more luck! “Sadly” I cannot go back to windows now, I got Linux-pilled. Linux just treats my right without any Microsoft ads.

Jayb151,

Yes, I’m keeping kubuntu on my laptop because it works great. My desktop is going to have to be Windows for now

mactan, in [Update - Resolved] Debian 12: how do I get Gnome Files to display preview thumbnails/icons for large video files? Right now it just shows generic icons

classic gnome moment

danielquinn, (edited ) in Screenshot tool for GNOME + Wayland
@danielquinn@lemmy.ca avatar

GNOME has one built in. Just hit the “print screen” button and it should appear.

danielf,

with on-the-fly editing features like drawing or blurring?

Unfortunately the built-in screenshot tool doesn’t have any editing capabilities.

mypasswordis1234,
@mypasswordis1234@lemmy.world avatar

with on-the-fly editing features like drawing or blurring

danielquinn,
@danielquinn@lemmy.ca avatar

Oops, sorry I didn’t notice that part. I’ve never seen anything like that to be honest. It kinda violates the whole “do only one thing and do it well” UNIX ethos. As a decent work-around, you can just open the resulting images in Gimp?

mypasswordis1234,
@mypasswordis1234@lemmy.world avatar

That’s what I’ve been doing since flameshot stopped working for me. I ask about the built-in solution, because pasting the image into GIMP and blurring specific parts drastically increases the time to prepare such a screenshot

miss_brainfart, in [Update - Resolved] Debian 12: how do I get Gnome Files to display preview thumbnails/icons for large video files? Right now it just shows generic icons
@miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml avatar

I remember seeing your original post.

Now, how about one step further:
How in heavens can you make Thunar show embedded thumbnails instead of auto-generated ones?

kattenluik, in Screenshot tool for GNOME + Wayland

Did a quick search and ksnip seems to be the only fully featured option. Watershot seems nice.

But also looking into it, Flameshot seems to have full support for Wayland so I’m not sure why you’re saying it doesn’t?

chaorace, in Screenshot tool for GNOME + Wayland
@chaorace@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Try Satty? It’s inspired by flameshot, Wayland native, and written in Rust.

Kidplayer_666, in Old ass chromebook distro recommendation [request]

Elementary OS might be what you are looking for. It has their own DE (pantheon) that I think was one of the first to implement 1:1 gesture navigation. It still uses X if I’m not mistaken so you are probably going to be able to use the backlight correctly.

Nimrod,

Looks interesting! Seems it pantheon is built on top of GNOME, so wouldn’t that make it a bit heavy for my 2GB RAM beater? Or is there really not that much difference between the different DEs with regard to resource usage?

Kidplayer_666,

Ohhhh, didn’t see the limited ram… maybe something with Xfce is the better option. With some customisation it looks very very good and is very very light

Cwilliams,

Is XFCE good on Touchpad gestures, though?

Nimrod,

After some serious googling, it looks like gestures is a feature that really only exists in the “luxury” DEs. There is something called Touchegg and Touche that can add them to others, but I’m not far along enough to know if it will do what I want it to.

I just tried debian with Xfce, and it’s pretty fast, but I REALLY love using gestures! It makes my tiny screen feel way bigger.

fxt_ryknow, in I'm Done With Windows, Are you?

I’m forced to use windows in my career life… But I moved to Linux entirely at home back in 05-06.

jimbolauski, in I'm Done With Windows, Are you?

I have a work Windows laptop that I refer to as my time machine. If not for having to use it for time sheets, email, word, and PowerPoint fun I’d kick the habit all together.

NOOBMASTER, in I'm Done With Windows, Are you?

I’m not done with it until it is eradicated from all the computers and tablets of this world.

KazuyaDarklight, in Linux in the corporate space
@KazuyaDarklight@lemmy.world avatar

While I’m told such places exist, I have yet to knowingly interact with a business officially doing this for employee computers.

mariusafa, in I'm Done With Windows, Are you?

I’m done both with windows and people that develope software that’s only compatible with windows. Kind of c# shitters.

Pantherina, (edited ) in I'm Done With Windows, Are you?

Opposite.

Fedora with KDE is a Pain, and GNOME is simply underpowered a lot.

Installing GrapheneOS or programming a microcontroller just didnt work. I have no idea of udev rules and these things should work better. (Tbh I will try to fix the packages)

Also processes crashing just often freeze my entire everything. No seperation, no ctrl+alt+del task manager which nearly always works. The task manager is a normal app, and it just doesnt start if the desktop is down.

Virt-manager has not enough RAM? Yeah, Plasma crashes and I need a hard reboot. Yay.

Meanwhile Windows sucks, but it works. Also it is better for

  • collaborative normie documents
  • office: easy presentations (again, collaboration), excel: easy graphs with a UI that makes sense
  • arcgis: qgis is better on surface, but all the underground transformation tools are so messed up.

Many things in Uni make me get insane on Linux. Being the only one literally learning another program, while learning a bit of that proprietary license garbage too, is burnout and I will probably fail in the “recognize this button in arcGis and explain how to do x” exam.

Titou,
@Titou@feddit.de avatar

used to do collaborative works on Linux, never had any issues

some_guy, in Linux in the corporate space

Plenty of software developers use Linux for their work.

Lettuceeatlettuce, in Linux in the corporate space
@Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml avatar

From what I’ve heard, it’s more common in Europe and parts of Asia. I’ve personally never seen significant Linux use of any kind in the IT environments I work in, sadly.

It’s all Microsoft product stacks, the servers, the endpoints, the cloud environment, all MS. Sometimes their Hypervisor would be VMWare, and their NAS was a Synology. But other than that, basically all Microsoft garbage.

I did work at one place that had a fair bit of Linux infrastructure. The lead network architect was a hardcore Linux/FOSS grognard. Really smart guy and was fantastic at his job, I learned a lot from him. But the only reason that company had Linux servers and a few FOSS implementations was because that guy insisted on it and managed all of it himself.

I also worked at another place where one of the older IT guys had installed a handful of SUSE thin clients at various locations for employees to clock in with. But right after I started there, management wanted me to switch them out for Windows thin clients. I pushed back but they insisted, so there went the tiny bit of Linux at that company.

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