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circuitfarmer, in State of the Budgie: 2023 In Review and Goals for 2024
@circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I’ve been impressed with Budgie, especially on older hardware, as an alternative to Gnome. Hoping things keep going well.

ObsidianZed, in Flathub Grows Past One Million Active Users

As a noob, can someone briefly explain flatpaks and why they may be preferred?

haui_lemmy,

Glad you asked

  • containerized apps
  • more secure than regular install
  • less clutter
  • no dependency hell
  • open source (in opposition to snap)
ObsidianZed,

That was my guess, from others’ context. Hits almost all of the good points.

How containerized though? Could it be a replacement for a docker server “farm” on a single machine or is it know for apps to simply use locally?

haui_lemmy,

Good question. Docker can be used for orchestration which I‘m pretty sure is a lot more than flatpak is designed for. So if this interests you (I‘m fine with docker) feel free to try it out and update me.

warmaster, (edited )

Containerization is not mandatory, some flatpaks are not air-gapped at all which is a real bummer. I wish they all were.

equivocal,

Are you referring to the ones with excessive sandbox permissions that flathub allows by default? Or is this something else?

haui_lemmy,

Thanks for mentioning this. I didnt know.

Loucypher,

For some apps this is just annoying. Like on Cryptomator

lemmyvore,

Can they not be closed down with flatseal?

baseless_discourse, (edited )

It is also much easier to install and update, since it don’t require restarting the computer, and also works on all distro.

haui_lemmy,

Exactly. Thanks for pointing it out.

LeFantome, in Any C# devs want to share their setup?

Rider on Linux is amazing.

Avalonia and UNO are your best bets for cross-platform.

platform.uno

avaloniaui.net

stoy, in Thanks for my free therapist session

I am mostly a windows user these days, but fifteen years ago I ran Linux as my main OS.

I ran Ubuntu on a Dell Latitude E5400, at first I ran Gnome 2 or KDE 4 as my DE, but got annoyed with how much vertical space they used, so I learned how to use Fluxbox.

Fluxbox is great, a small stacking WM, that is easy to configure and worked like I wanted it.

I still set it up to run gnome-settings-daemon as I had no idea on how to do apply a GTK theme without it.

The really annoying part of running fluxbox as a WM was that I never figured out how to shut down the computer from a menu, it allways complained about me not having permissions to shut down the computer, so I used to do a log off and before the GDM login screen loaded I could press the power button on the laptop and have it shutdown the computer gracefully, timing was key, but it worked.

possiblylinux127, in AMD Publishes XDNA Linux Driver: Support For Ryzen AI On Linux

Finally, it was only after a massive github issue with thousands of people

slacktoid, in Thanks for my free therapist session
@slacktoid@lemmy.ml avatar

Hi … so … Um wanna be friends? whats your favorite font?

optissima,
@optissima@lemmy.world avatar

Iosevka

slacktoid,
@slacktoid@lemmy.ml avatar

I love finding other fonts with Code glyphs. It looks like it would look cool on a terminal. I use fira code.

optissima,
@optissima@lemmy.world avatar

Fira is my #2, but iosevka makes the terminal feel like home.

wwwgem,
@wwwgem@lemmy.ml avatar

Both iosevka and fira look nice.

slacktoid,
@slacktoid@lemmy.ml avatar

I get that, some just call you.

wwwgem,
@wwwgem@lemmy.ml avatar

Source Code Pro for writing and Nerd for symbols.

slacktoid,
@slacktoid@lemmy.ml avatar

Solid choice, I use Fira code with nerd for symbols.

mvirts, in Thanks for my free therapist session

I’m gonna come clean: I used awesome wm for years, never touched the configuration once 😹. Now I do the same with gnome

mvirts, in Linux file transfer speed bottlenecks?

I would put money on rsync being the issue, it’s not fast

mvirts, in [Solved] Had a power outage while updating my fedora system, and now dnf has file conflicts. Is it recoverable?

Yes

UmbraTemporis, in State of the Budgie: 2023 In Review and Goals for 2024

Budgie is my absolute favourite DE, and the first project I donated too, can’t wait to see what the future holds for it. Fedora Onyx is a great experience.

noddy, in What are some must have Linux compatible VSTs?

Surge XT is a must. Best FOSS synth there is IMO. 3 oscillators in 2 scenes. Filters, effects, all the LFOs and envelopes in the world, all the modulation, expression aftertouch, etc you need. A bunch of presets out of the box. Very flexible synth, though can be a bit learning curve to get going.

Honorable mentions to Dexed (basically a software DX7), GeonKick (for synthesizing drums), and pianoteq (proprietary, but best there is in piano synth with native linux support).

1984, in This week in KDE: everything everywhere all at once edition
@1984@lemmy.today avatar

Can’t wait for February 28th… :)

somegeek, in Flathub Grows Past One Million Active Users

Why does it only have git sign in? What If I don’t want to use those shitty git services?

OsrsNeedsF2P,

You mean GitHub signin?

Because Flathub operates on GitHub. If you hate it that much, you could use a different Flatpak distributor (I heard Fedora has its own?)

JustEnoughDucks, in I feel like I'm missing out by not distro-hopping
@JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl avatar

If it aint broke, don’t fix it.

I have used arch on this same install since 2019, before that, 2016. (Just because I wanted to get my old system back ASAP and was comfortable with the process)

If I had to do it over, I would test out openSUSE tumbleweeb or endeavor, but if you have your system that works and you like it, there is absolutely nothing to gain by switching.

If you just want to explore or do it as a hobby, use an old SSD and test out different configs on a seperate drive (you can pick up a 128 or 240GB SSD for like $25) but the only differences are package managers and DE.

ashley, in Distro for 2013 iMac
@ashley@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

anything that isnt very hard to run should be fine. ive personally ran a distro on an early 2012/2013 mac and it worked just fine. forgot what one but i know it was a very common mainstream one. i also somehow got kali on it so that was interesting too. if you want something easy and simple you should probably use mint or debian if they support imacs, otherwise? its really down to personal pref

Loucypher,

Yeah, the idea is something simple and stable. Stable because I don’t want to babysit the OS (I already do that at work), and simple so my wife can also use it in case of need. She only know windows so anything the comes close in terms of UI is “ok” for her. The real choice was between KDE or cinnamon. Eventually opted for Mint/Debian

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