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redcalcium, in New Linux user here. Is this really how I'm supposed to install apps on Linux?

Chance that your Ubuntu version already supports OpenVPN and wireguard (check your settings -> network). If so, just download wireguard/OpenVPN config files from mullvad: mullvad.net/account/openvpn-config?platform=linux

loo, in Wifi stopped showing in linux mint
@loo@lemmy.world avatar

I have the exact same issue atm. After a new Windows update, I have to disable Wifi on Windows for it to work on Linux. It sounds bizarre, but try disabling Wifi on Windows.

Shady_Shiroe, in [Resolved] Why does the font on Lemmy.world look like an eyesore?
@Shady_Shiroe@lemmy.world avatar

Bruh, I read “font” as “front” in title and was confused as to why you were listing your os specs

nekusoul, (edited ) in how do i efficiently attach audio to an image
@nekusoul@lemmy.nekusoul.de avatar

Since the end goal is to post a video to YouTube, you will have to create a video file. Personally I would probably just be lazy and upload the large file, since YouTube is going to reconvert the video anyway.

That said, to optimize the file you need to know how videos work, specifically key frames. Speaking generally, when a video gets encoded, it doesn’t add the whole image for each frame. Instead, it only does that when the current frame is a key frame, and then only stores the difference to the previous frame for every regular frame. There’s a lot of different strategies when placing keyframes, like every X seconds, when the scene changes, or both. This is usually you can change somewhere in the encoding settings of the application you’re using. You will need to use a codec/format that supports interframe compression though, so avoid AVI and MJPEG.

So the TL;DR is: Try to decrease the amount of key frames as much as possible, maybe even down to only one if possible.

selokichtli, (edited ) in Gentoo goes Binary (packages)

Love this change. I wonder if I can install a binary-based Gentoo distro and gradually progress from there, if I wanted to, with locally compiled packages that partially replace the binaries. I hope this is not an all-or-nothing situation, so better read the announcement.

EDIT: Hey, yes we can!

ben, in Gentoo goes Binary (packages)
@ben@lef.li avatar

So… Bentoo? Bintoo?

GnomeComedy,

For the uninitiated, does “gen” imply source/compilation somehow?

Aatube,
@Aatube@kbin.social avatar

no, it's a penguin

pastermil,

Bento 🍱

ben,
@ben@lef.li avatar

😋

wewbull,

Gen-toobin

The distro for white water rafters.

Elric, in Writing program

God he says no Vim and everybody goes on about vim. Please learn to read. It obviously isn’t for programming.

fruitycoder,

I honestly use nvim for my general note taking.

MothWaves,

Recommendations for OP aside, with sentence-based editing (das/cas/etc…) I feel like vim can be a really good tool for writing.

dutchkimble, in need help fixing a hardware problem using linux

Firstly, hats off to you for trying to properly diagnose the problem and trying everything that you did. Hope you find the solution soon. Some random suggestions if you haven’t already tried - clean the battery contacts (I’m not sure of the best method to do so but I’m sure you can find something online), check to see if the problem exists in different screen refresh rates, turn off auto brightness if its on.

This is something to try but not sure how to do this in Linux - dell.com/…/why-does-the-screen-flicker-while-runn…

All the best

dingdongitsabear,

nah, tried that when I had windows on it. that and a bunch of other stuff from the unhelpfulest site on the webz - dell.com. screen rates and resolutions and auto brightness as well. the battery contacts are way too tiny for me to do anything meaningful there. besides, I’m thinking that if the battery is the problem, then there shouldn’t be any issues when running the thing on external power; it’s not like the battery is powering the laptop when connected to external power, it’s running on external power and using the surplus to charge the battery.

dylanmorgan, in What's your experience with a touchscreen laptop on your distro?

I use Fedora on a gen 7 Carbon X1 thinkpad and the small amount I use the touch screen has worked fine.

Jakeroxs, (edited )

I also use Fedora Wayland but on a HP Spectre X360 from like 2013 or something, touch screen works fine and overall runs a lot better then win 10 was prior.

mr_MADAFAKA, in KDE's Nate Graham On X11 Being A Bad Platform & The Wayland Future
@mr_MADAFAKA@lemmy.ml avatar

Oh boy, the Phoronix’s comment section 💀

Rustmilian, (edited )
@Rustmilian@lemmy.world avatar

Phoronix’s comment section is usually full of trolls, shills, and people afflicted with brain rot. So I don’t even bother reading them anymore.

Crozekiel, in What distros have you tried and thought, "Nope, this one's not for me"?

PopOS and Ubuntu - really just found that I don’t like gnome. Nothing against it, I know some people love it but it is not for me. This would likely apply to any gnome distro, but those were the two I tried and immediately moved on.

Honorable mention: Manjaro because “it just breaks™” but it wasn’t something I noticed immediately and initially liked the os…

MrFunnyMoustache,

Manjaro made me lose some hairs in frustration… Not for me.

Crozekiel,

Yea… That’s where my hair went… It was Manjaro’s fault… 😅

pete_the_cat,

You are aware that you can have multiple DEs installed at once, right? Also many distros have multiple different choices for the default DE. I haven’t used it for probably over a decade, but I’m sure Kubuntu, the KDE version of Ubuntu, still exists.

Crozekiel,

I am aware the DE can be changed, but it was just an honest answer to OP’s question. I downloaded like 8 different distros and put them on flash drives and tried them all out and that was what caused me to move on. I didn’t have kubuntu downloaded to try, probably because canonical seems to treat them as entirely different distros.

ie, some distros have the DE options when looking at the download page or have you choose during the live boot which to use and include multiple in one iso. Ubuntu makes no mention of those separate downloads unless you explore their site a bit further than the download page. It’s a minor difference but makes a difference when you’re grabbing a handful of isos to try out, you might miss it and assume the one iso has all the options available when it doesn’t, or that it is the only option they provide.

As for PopOS I actually did look into changing to KDE and the popular wisdom at the time on message boards was that changing to KDE would possibly or likely undo most of the benefits of the tweaks and changes system 76 made. I don’t have any idea if that is even true, just what came up when searching a few years back.

pete_the_cat,

I get your reasoning, a lot of “re-spins” are hidden away on many distros download pages, but saying something like “I don’t like Ubuntu because it uses Gnome” is like saying “I don’t like Fords because they come with radios”.

Regarding PopOS it probably is true because it probably all GUI specific things setup for new users, anything system level wouldn’t be changed.

Crozekiel,

Yea, it’s definitely not a good reason to not like Ubuntu. I really never used Ubuntu enough to make a fair opinion of it.

EponymousBosh,
@EponymousBosh@beehaw.org avatar

I hate GNOME so much. To each their own but I don’t want my computer to look like an iPhone.

Crozekiel,

Dude. Same.

lemmyvore, in Dell Latitude Frustration

I would start by running a full memtest scan. Faulty RAM can manifest itself as apparently random freezes or application crashes.

lemmy_user_838586, (edited )

That was my first thought, sounds like a hardware issue, either maybe overheating? Faulty ram or ssd issues, etc

Been using Ubuntu on my Dell Latitude 7490 for years with no issues

knfrmity,

Of course I should have done that too. Running one now, I’ll let it go for a few hours and see what happens.

lemmy_user_838586,

Not sure you saw my edit, but I’ve been using a Dell Latitude 7490 for years and its been perfectly fine, so the issues you’re experiencing aren’t normal. Something is definitely up with your specific laptop. Just mentioning to help you narrow down issues.

lemmyvore,

If it finds bad areas take a picture. You can tell the kernel which are the bad addresses so it can avoid them.

gregorum,

How did that go?

arjache, in What distros have you tried and thought, "Nope, this one's not for me"?

NixOS. If I’m going to invest that much effort to configure a system I don’t want to have to put up with systemd.

Aman9das, (edited )

Same here. I really wanted to use it but it doesn’t offer much over Universal Blue

If i really need reproducibility I’ll use nix on my home

brian,

I’ve found nixos is perfect for me since I like how precisely I can configure it.

Oddly enough, I’ve had a decent chunk of my only barely technical friend group switch to it for the opposite reason. They all just copypaste snippets of config between each other, and if something breaks they just go back a revision. I doubt any of them spend much time configuring anything. It really is the perfect idiot proof distro and I don’t normally see people talking about that side of it

coolin,

Yeah, I think Nix is a good concept but I feel like 99% of the config work could be managed by the OS itself and a GUI to change everything else. I also feel like flakes should be the default, not this weird multiple systems thing they have. I also wish most apps would have a sandbox built in, because nix apps would then rival flatpak and, if ported to Windows, become a universal package manager. Overall good concept but not there yet.

pingveno, in What distros have you tried and thought, "Nope, this one's not for me"?

Gentoo: I hated constantly compiling and configuring. It was incredibly time consuming. If I was compiling for uncommon cases it might make sense, but I am dealing with a pretty standard dev machine.

NixOS: The configuration is kind of a pain and never really got the extra features you get beyond package management working correctly.

RickyRigatoni,
@RickyRigatoni@lemmy.ml avatar

I refuse to believe there are people who use Gentoo seriously. There is no possible way it’s not just a joke about how goofy a true stallman-esque approach to FOSS is.

moonsnotreal,
@moonsnotreal@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I can see it being ok if you cross compile for something like an old power pc mac. Even then there are still some distros that support power pc (Maybe bsds too?).

pingveno, (edited )

I used it on an old potato chip of a Pentium 4 (this was nearly 20 years ago). It took days to compile what I wanted, which was a basic system plus KDE. I don’t know what was going through my 17 year old brain. But hey, it walked me through some details of a Linux system that I wouldn’t have encountered otherwise. Now I would recommend Linux From Scratch for learning and a nice, stable distro with a large, supportive community for a daily driver.

pete_the_cat,

Are you me? I just posted the same thing above. I attempted to get KDE working during my freshman year of college (2004-2005) on what was either a high end P4 or Athlon X2, it would spend 10-15 hours compiling X and then break, leaving me no clue what to do but I went from using Ubuntu for about 5 months to a stage 2 Gentoo installation. I never did get it working.

pingveno,

I got it working, but KDE just didn’t work well with the resource constraints. I should have picked something more lightweight. Oh well.

racketlauncher831,

I’ll give you one reason for using Gentoo: option of no systemd.

Gentoo is one of the few distros which still offer a systemdless setup given its nature of high configurability. You can tell the system-wide config file to exclude systemd support in every package it attemps to compile.

I hope you or anyone who just enjoys their linux machine running fine and happily, now be able to see what freedom can mean in the open source universe. Cheers.

technologicalcaveman,

I use it, been using it for a while. Both my desktop and laptop run it. I like it a lot and find it really easy to use. Amytime I find an issue I can pretty quickly fix it and keep my system clean. Games run great, my music production software is great, it's fast, and just overall very enjoyable to use.

technologicalcaveman, in What distros have you tried and thought, "Nope, this one's not for me"?

Debian, don't like apt.
Arch, breaks too much.
NixOs, just don't need the tools it provides.
Any fork of a mainline distro because it's never as good as the root.

I used arch for a while, but got sick of running repairs every few weeks. I use Gentoo now, it's stable and good. I have a fuck ton of ram and a good cpu, I also take advantage of binary packages from time to time. I don't really need to install new things that much after having done the initial install.

kattenluik,

For the record, Arch breaking at all is probably entirely on you.

technologicalcaveman,

The arch breaks were always related to keys. I would run an update and there would always be an error related to the keys. Never had a breakage due to confs.

noddy,

Usually you can fix that with


<span style="color:#323232;">pacman -S archlinux-keyring
</span>
technologicalcaveman,

I know that, but I still hate having to. Having that as a common issue is just dumb, to me.

steeznson,

I used to distro-hop until 2017 when I started using Gentoo as my main distro. I did not have the same experiences as you with Arch but I tended to avoid the AUR. Ultimately Gentoo has kept my attention by being more flexible rather than having negative experiences with Arch.

I suppose I still distro-hop a little bit on an old laptop I’ve got but that one alternates between Debian and OpenBSD; also its primary use is a terminal for SSH’ing into my Gentoo desktop from the sofa.

Probably the only distro I’ve had a truly bad experience with is Manjaro. The additional repo that it comes bundled with creates more problems than it solves. Also - although this never affected me personally - the story about developers asking their users to reset their system clocks to accept an expired PGP key is an absolute scandal.

lseif,

out of curiosity, what was breaking in arch for you?

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